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Posts Tagged ‘Leon Panetta’

Dick Cheney’s Oily Dream

Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair is currently saying that Dick Cheney’s vision of policy towards the Middle East after 9/11 was to re-draw the map:Vice-President Dick Cheney’s vision of completely redrawing the map of the Middle East following…

Pak plan for Afghan peace leaves US wary


NEW YORK – US President Barack Obama and the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency were at variance on Sunday in assessing the Afghanistan peace deal being promoted by Pakistan between the Afghan government and some Taliban militants.
While urging caution, Obama, in Canada, called the Pakistani move “useful step”, saying a political solution to the conflict was necessary and suggested elements of the Taliban insurgency could be part of negotiations. But, earlier in the day, CIA Cirector Leon Panetta forcefully expressed his doubts about the plan.
“We have seen no evidence that they are truly interested in reconciliation, where they would surrender their arms, where they would denounce Al-Qaeda, where they would really try to become part of that society,” Panetta said in Washington on ABC’s “This Week”.
Acknowledging that the American-led counterinsurgency effort was facing unexpected difficulty, Panetta said that the Taliban and their allies had little motive to contemplate a power-sharing arrangement in Afghanistan.
But the President was diplomatic when asked about whether efforts by Pakistan and Afghanistan to reintegrate Taliban were a good idea.
“I think it’s too early to tell. I think we have to view these efforts with scepticism but also with openness,” the President said while responding to questions at a Press conference marking the end of the G-20 summit in Toronto, Canada.
According to the New York Times, the US President avoided any direct comment on whether the Haqqani network, the Taliban group reportedly proposed by Pakistan as part of a power-sharing deal, could become part of AfghanistanÂ’s future leadership.
But, he said, “conversations between the Afghan government and the Pakistani government, building trust between those two governments, are a useful step.”
Obama also said a political solution to the conflict was necessary and suggested elements of the Taliban insurgency could be part of negotiations.
He noted that as the Afghanistan war approached its 10th anniversary, it was the longest foreign war in American history, and that “ultimately as was true in Iraq, so will be true in Afghanistan, we will have to have a political solution.”
As for Pakistan’s effort to broker talks, Obama added, “I think it’s too early to tell. I think we have to view these efforts with scepticism but also with openness. The Taliban is a blend of hardcore ideologues, tribal leaders, kids that basically sign up because it’s the best job available to them. Not all of them are going to be thinking the same way about the Afghan government, about the future of Afghanistan. And so we’re going to have to sort through how these talks take place.”
The comments Sunday were the administrationÂ’s first public response to a report of PakistanÂ’s deal-brokering efforts last week in The New York Times.
On Saturday, The New York Times said AfghanistanÂ’s minority communities – Tajik, Uzbek and Hazara – have vowed to resist, and if necessary, fight, any deal that involves bringing members of the Taliban insurgency into a power-sharing arrangement with President Hamid KarzaiÂ’s government.
In an earlier dispatch in The Times, Pakistani officials were quoted as saying they can deliver the network of Sirajuddin Haqqani, an ally of Al-Qaeda who runs a major part of the insurgency in Afghanistan, into a power-sharing arrangement with the Afghan government.
American commanders have concluded that only a political settlement can end the war, the report said. But in helping Karzai to make a deal, they risk reigniting AfghanistanÂ’s ethnic strife.
The leaders of these minority communities say that President Karzai appears determined to hand Taliban leaders a share of power – and Pakistan a large degree of influence inside the country, according to The Times. The Americans, desperate to end their involvement here, are helping Karzai along and shunning the Afghan opposition, they say.
Agencies add: US President Obama contended America would be less secure if Al-Qaeda still could be housed in Afghanistan, and contended there remains “a vital national interest that Afghanistan not be used as a base to launch terrorist attacks”.
He also said the US intends “to be a partner for Afghanistan for the long term, but that is different than us having troops on the ground”, adding that a political solution is needed as well as a military one to the Afghan conflict.
Obama sought to shelve what he sees as a false choice between “either we get up and leave (Afghanistan) immediately because there’s no chance for a positive outcome or we stay indefinitely.”
Still, Obama said, “We’re going to need to provide assistance to Afghanistan for a long time to come.”
The US President said that he will conduct a review of his new strategy in December, fix what is not working and then begin the transition next year.
“That doesn’t mean that we suddenly turn off the lights and let the door close behind us,” Obama said.
Obama acknowledged that “there has been a lot of obsession around this issue of when do we leave.”
But he said he is more interested in implementing his strategy and seeing results, and he will review whether or not the strategy is working after the December review.
Obama offered a rationale for the nationÂ’s very presence in Afghanistan.
“You’ll often hear, why are we in Afghanistan when the terrorists are in Pakistan?” Obama said.

CIA director says bomber ‘was about to be searched’

CIA Director Leon Panetta revealed on Saturday that a Jordanian doctor who killed seven agency operatives was about to be searched before he blew himself up at a US military base in Afghanistan. “This was not a question of trusting a potential intelligence asset, even one who had provided

Pak’s advise unlikely to be heard by Obama administration

Pakistani has advised the Obama administration not to send additional US troops to Afghanistan, and instead negotiate with the Taliban.
Pakistan Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani’’s office recently told visiting CIA Director Leon Panetta of “Pakistan’’s concerns relating to the possible surge of the US and ISAF forces in Afghanistan which may entail negative implications [...]

CIA chief meets Narayanan

Chief of the America’s Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Leon Panetta, met National Security Advisor M K Narayanan here on Saturday.
Panetta, who arrived here late last night after his visit to Pakistan, met for nearly 30-minutes with Narayanan.
Narayanan later accompanied Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to the US.
During his three-day visit to India, the CIA chief will [...]

ISI Chief confronts CIA counterpart with evidence


ISLAMABAD – Serious differences are understood to have cropped up between Pakistan’s premier intelligence agency ISI and US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) over the latter’s dismal role in countering terrorism in Pakistan, TheNation reliably learnt on Friday.
According to well-placed sources, the differences between the two strategic partners in war against terror cropped up when ISI Chief Lt. General Ahmed Shujja Pasha in a meeting expressed his disappointment to his US counterpart, the CIA chief spymaster Leon Panetta, over the US failure to help Pakistan in counter-terrorism efforts.
Although there was no official confirmation either from the US Embassy or ISPR about the meeting, it was learnt that both of them had thought provoking talks here in which General Pasha had presented to the CIA official a shocking evidence about Indian interference into Pakistan by using Afghanistan soil. General Pasha, the informed sources said, had presented the evidence about Indian efforts aiding terrorism in Balochistan and Waziristan.
The sources said that General Pasha was critical to the CIAÂ’s counter-terrorism strategy in Afghanistan and CIAÂ’s failure to provide concrete actionable information to Pakistan in containing flow of aid to terror networks operating from Afghanistan to destabilize Pakistan.
The sources said that the CIA chief is currently visiting Pakistan as a follow-up to the visit of US of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to address complains of PakistanÂ’s military establishment.
The CIA chief is to meet Army Chief General Ashfaq Pavez Kayani today and is likely to get the similar input from him, the sources said. He is also expected to visit Saudi Arabia before his return to USA.

Mr. Panetta Needs a History Lesson

CIA director Leon Panetta implied Sunday that the “reality of 9/11″ excused the unconstitutional and criminal acts of the Bush administration:The country was frightened, and political leaders were trying to respond as best they could. Judgments were ma…

Michael Brenner: Did the CIA Assassinate? What We Need to Know

A serious examination of the CIA/assassination story should begin by sweeping aside the rubbish cluttering the electronic ether on this issue.

Frank Naif: Torture, wiretaps, lies to Congress: old spy cronies a drag on Obama’s ‘look to the future’

The Obama national security team talks a big game about not dwelling on past national security misdeeds, but the persistence of so many Bush-era spy…

CIA Was About To Train Anti-Terror Hit Squads When Panetta Ended The Program

CIA officials were proposing to activate a plan to train anti-terrorist assassination teams overseas when agency managers brought the secret program to the attention of CIA Director Leon Panetta last month, according to two U.S. officials fami…

House CIA Investigation: Intelligence Committee Lays Groundwork For Full-Blown Probe

WASHINGTON — The House Intelligence Committee has asked the CIA to provide documents about the now-canceled program to target al-Qaida leaders, congressional officials said Tuesday. The move is a precursor to what will almost certainly b…

Chris Weigant: Obama’s “Drip, Drip, Drip…” Intelligence Problem

President Obama has always said he wants to look forward, not backward. This, when it comes to the actions of the previous administration, means Obama…

Past or future?

By Kevin Connolly
BBC News, Washington

CIA logo

In the world of intelligence gathering the past never really goes away – it stays around to haunt the present and set traps for the future.

The issue of how America conducted its "war on terror" – who it tortured and detained and on whose orders – is full of such traps.

We know that Barack Obama knows this – he talks about the need to move forward rather than to look back – but that is no guarantee that he will be able to resist calls for some sort of investigation of the Bush administration’s intelligence policies.

The argument from the human rights lobby and the left of the Democratic Party appears to have gained ground in Washington in the last week or so – some sort of enquiry is now necessary, they believe, to re-assert the rule of law and restore America to the moral high ground of international diplomacy.

Dirty linen

The case against re-opening the wounds of the recent past lacks moral clarity, perhaps, but it is no less passionately held among Republicans.

Washing too much dirty linen in public too quickly, they point out, might compromise ongoing counter-terrorism operations, embarrass some of America’s loyal allies and even risk alienating some intelligence professionals who carried out orders under President George W Bush and who continue to do so under Barack Obama.

You could perhaps mount an enquiry into a single incident – like the allegation that America’s ally General Abdul Rashid Dostum may have murdered Taliban prisoners in 2001 – without creating too much domestic political fallout.

But anything more broad-ranging would carry considerable political risk.

Stories about intelligence issues in all media outlets – and this one is no exception – are frequently confused and confusing.

That is natural enough – very often such facts as we know have been put into the public domain by intelligence officials with axes to grind and there is no way to verify them.

"Any sort of enquiry will suck the air out of Washington politics and make it very difficult for Mr Obama to continue his search for the elusive spirit of bi-partisanship on tricky issues like healthcare reform"

So it makes sense to start with the politics of what is going on in Washington – at least there the motives of all concerned are easy enough to unpick.

So, for example, there are Democrats, led by Senator Patrick Leahy, chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, who would like to see a commission of enquiry into allegations of CIA involvement in the torture of terrorism suspects.

At the same time, Attorney-General Eric Holder has let it be known that he is considering appointing a special prosecutor to look into those allegations, too.

You could take the Machiavellian view that Mr Holder has been put forward by the administration to make it look as though it is considering re-opening this huge seething can of worms and that in the end the White House will quietly shelve the whole affair.

But either way, it has to be acknowledged at the moment that the push from the left for something to be done is huge.

Forces of darkness

The White House, of course, is alive to the obvious political danger.

First, any sort of enquiry will suck the air out of Washington politics and make it very difficult for Mr Obama to continue his search for the elusive spirit of bi-partisanship on tricky issues like healthcare reform.

And second, in a country where power tends to alternate between parties of the right and left, one sure way to guarantee inquiries into Democratic administrations of the future is to stage one into a Republican administration of the past.

But some Democrats will not be deterred by that kind of pragmatism.

There is a strong view in some quarters on the left that in its reaction to the terror attacks on 9/11, the Bush administration strayed far outside the law and the constitution it should have been upholding.

In this version of the recent past, the former Vice-President Dick Cheney is portrayed as a figure of grim malevolence, conjuring and orchestrating the forces of darkness behind the throne.

Dick Cheney and Barack Obama

Part of the Democrats’ motivation is to hold Mr Cheney accountable for his actions – or in plain English, to "get him".

So, not surprisingly, Mr Cheney is also a central figure in the other strand of an increasingly complex web of allegations – this time about the relationship between Congress and the CIA.

The charge against Mr Cheney is that he instructed senior CIA officers to conceal from Congress the existence of a secret operation, set up after 9/11.

American law does arguably provide for such concealment – although only temporarily and in the most exceptional circumstances.

Essentially, though, the intelligence agencies are fully accountable to Congress and any deviation from that accountability would be hugely sensitive.

Democrats say they only found out about the operation when its existence was disclosed last month to the new director of the CIA, Leon Panetta, who immediately closed it down and came to Capitol Hill to brief them.

They say this is important mainly because the CIA’s accountability to Congress appears to have been compromised.

Linking thread

One possible solution being mooted is to increase from eight to 40 or 50 the number of senior members of the House who are routinely briefed on such matters.

That is another suggestion towards which the White House is lukewarm at best.

Republicans sense this may all be some kind of smokescreen to protect the Democratic Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, who has yet to provide a full explanation of her own claim that the CIA directly lied to her about the use of waterboarding in the early years of the "war on terror".

That claim had the effect of deflecting claims that Speaker Pelosi had known all about the practice of waterboarding which she later said she deplored.

From the Democrats’ point of view, making the issue a general one about the relationship between Congress and the CIA tends to deflect attention from Speaker Pelosi.

The linking thread in these various issues

Well, that is the whole question of the extent to which – if at all – the energies of the Obama years should be spent staging investigations – and perhaps prosecutions – based on American actions during the administration of George W Bush.

For Mr Obama, this is an acute, and increasingly pressing dilemma.

He has to weigh the need to remain true to his grassroots supporters (and perhaps his own instincts) against the dangers of alienating the intelligence establishment and poisoning the political atmosphere in Washington.

We know him on such issues to be cautious and pragmatic – his decision on this delicate issue will tell us a good deal more about his political judgement. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Cheney ‘hid plans to kill al-Qaida’

• Ex-CIA officials say foreign leaders were also in dark
• Investigation demanded into post-9/11 strategy

Dick Cheney, the former vice president, ordered a highly classified CIA operation hidden from Congress because it pushed the limits of legality by planning to assassinate al-Qaida operatives in friendly countries without the knowledge of their governments, according to former intelligence officials.

Former counter-terrorism officials who retain close links to the intelligence community say that the hidden operation involved plans by the CIA and the military to launch operations, similar to those by Israel’s Mossad intelligence service, to hunt down and kill al-Qaida activists abroad without informing the governments concerned, even though some were regarded as friendly if unreliable.

The CIA apparently did not put the plan in to operation but the US military did, carrying out several assassinations including one in Kenya that proved to be a severe embarrassment and helped lead to the quashing of the programme.

A former intelligence official said the plan was hatched in the cauldron of the September 11 attacks when officials were pushing various forms of unilateral action and some settled on the Israelis as an example.

“One of the most sensitive areas has been what we do in friendly countries that don’t want to co-operate or maybe we don’t have enough confidence to entrust them with information. If you have an al-Qaida guy wandering around certain bits of the world we might decide that we need to deal with that ourselves, directly, without making a lot of noise,” he said. “There was a plan to deal with that. It was much talked about in the CIA and the military had its own operation.”

Another former senior intelligence official responsible for dealing with al-Qaida said that assassination plans were reined in after similar covert operations by the military were botched and proved to be embarrassing, particularly the killing in Kenya. He did not give details of the operation.

The official said he believes from conversations with serving members of the CIA that the area of real concern in Congress is that the planned operations may also have involved the covert surveillance of American citizens.

There appears to be common agreement among knowledgeable former intelligence officials that the controversy goes beyond the immediate question of assassination and capture of al-Qaida operatives as there have been numerous killings and detentions since the 9/11 attacks.

One former official said that the Bush administration discussed assassinations in the context of a ban introduced in the 1970s that responded to several failed CIA attempts to murder Fidel Castro, and concluded that as the US had declared itself at war with al-Qaida and the Taliban, this ban did not apply.

Peter Bergen, a senior security analyst at the New America Foundation, said that the secret operation must have gone further than that to have created such a backlash in Congress: “If it’s an assassination programme of al-Qaida leaders that is hardly surprising. Clinton had an assassination programme against bin Laden. There have been 27 drone missile strikes against al-Qaida alone this year.”

The CIA has declined to comment and members of Congress who were finally briefed about the issue by the CIA director, Leon Panetta, last month are bound by confidentiality.

Some former intelligence officials and Republicans have attempted to portray the programme as barely getting out of the planning stages but others in the intelligence community have said it is highly unlikely that the CIA would have kept such an operation going for eight years without advancing it.

The evident anger in Congress is fuelling demands for a full blown investigation in to the CIA’s failure to disclose the programme and Cheney’s role in the cover up. The Senate majority whip, Dick Durbin, said the programme could have been illegal: “The executive branch of government should not create programs like these programs and keep Congress in the dark. To have a massive program that was concealed from the leaders in Congress is not only inappropriate, it could be illegal.”

Anna Eshoo, a senior Democrat on the House of Representatives intelligence committee, is also calling for a probe. “We, by no means, have the full story. We don’t know who gave the order. We don’t know where the money came from. We don’t know all the people who were involved,” she told Politico. “We need a full investigation. My preference is that we hire an attorney to come in and run this, someone that is known for their prosecutorial knowledge as well as their knowledge of this particular area of the law.”

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Cheney’s Secret “Unit Was So Secret That Even The Former CIA Director George Tenet Did Not Control Its Activities”

We know that the new director of the CIA, Leon Panetta, was kept in the dark for months about the secret counterterrorism program. But Scotland’s leading newspaper – the Scotsman – has a stunning new revelation: The unit was so secret that even the for…

Cheney ‘ordered CIA to hide plan’

Dick Cheney - file image

Former US Vice-President Dick Cheney gave direct orders to the CIA to conceal an intelligence programme from Congress, US media reports say.

The existence of the programme, set up after 9/11, was hidden for eight years and even now its nature is not known.

CIA director Leon Panetta is said to have abandoned the project when he learnt of it last month.

He has now told a House committee that Mr Cheney was behind the secrecy, the unnamed US sources say.

There has been no comment from Mr Cheney.

War of words

The claims come amid an increasingly bitter row between the CIA and Congress over whether key information was withheld about other aspects of the agency’s operations.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has claimed that the CIA misled her about interrogation methods including waterboarding, while other senior Democrats have quoted Mr Panetta as admitting that his agency regularly misled Congress before he took office.

Leon Panetta

Details of the newly-revealed secret programme have still not been divulged, but sources say it did not relate to the CIA’s rendition programme, interrogation methods or a controversial domestic surveillance project.

Officials quoted by the New York Times say the programme was launched by anti-terror operatives at the CIA soon after the 2001 attacks, and involved planning and training but never became fully operational.

Another unnamed official told AP it was an embryonic intelligence-gathering effort, aimed at yielding intelligence that would be used to conduct a covert operations abroad.

Sources have told a number of US media outlets Mr Cheney personally instructed the CIA to withhold information about the programme from Congress.

Mr Panetta – who took over directorship of the CIA under President Obama’s administration – is said to have learnt about the programme only on 23 June.

The next day he called an emergency meeting with congressional intelligence committees to tell them about its existence and to say that it was being cancelled, the reports say.

Veto threat

The allegations come as the Democrats in Congress are trying push through new rules that would increase the number of members of Congress who are told about covert operations.

The White House is threatening to veto the bill, fearing that operational secrecy could be compromised.

The CIA has not commented on the reports of Mr Cheney’s role.

"It’s not agency practice to discuss what may or may not have been said in a classified briefing," said spokesman Paul Gimigliano.

"When a CIA unit brought this matter to Director Panetta’s attention, it was with the recommendation that it be shared appropriately with Congress. That was also his view, and he took swift, decisive action to put it into effect."

A CIA spokesman insisted earlier this week that "it is not the policy or practice of the CIA to mislead Congress." </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

CIA Secret Program Was To Capture Or Kill Al Qaeda Operatives

A secret Central Intelligence Agency initiative terminated by Director Leon Panetta was an attempt to carry out a 2001 presidential authorization to capture or kill al Qaeda operatives, according to former intelligence officials familiar with …

Cheney Told CIA To Hide Program From Congress

WASHINGTON — Former Vice President Dick Cheney directed the CIA eight years ago not to inform Congress about a nascent counterterrorism program that CIA Director Leon Panetta terminated in June, officials with direct knowledge of the mat…

What Did the CIA Lie to Congress About?

CIA director Panetta admitted to Congress that the CIA misled Congress concerning “significant actions” from 2001 to the present. As Congress wrote to Panetta yesterday:”Recently you testified that you have determined that top CIA officials have conce…