TO: Porter Goss, U.S. Director of Central Intelligence
FROM: Robert Baer
RE: Getting the CIA Back in the Game
It’s been a rough three years, Mr. Director. The agency missed the boat
on Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction (WMD), it miscalculated the armed
resistance inside the country, and some say it bears primary responsibility
for leading the United States into an unnecessary and costly war. Much of the
criticism is overblown, and much overlooks the equally grave failures of other
sectors of the government. Still, the CIA is clearly broken, and you have a
chance to fix it.
Avoid two traps at the outset: Don’t waste your time thinking that the
recent, and much ballyhooed, intelligence reform bill is going to put things
right. As you must know already, a top-level reshuffling of the intelligence
community won’t do anything to improve the CIA’s performance. And
don’t spend too much time fighting battles over your new management team.
Most of them will have moved to other jobs before they learn the nuts and bolts
of intelligence gathering.
Reform is needed across the board, but the Directorate of Operations (DO) should
be your first target. Its mission—recruiting and running foreign spies—should
be the agency’s core function. Give the DO the tools it needs, and intelligence
analysis will take care of itself. Not to be too blunt about it, but if the
DO had a source close to Osama bin Laden, 9/11 would not have happened. Here
are my suggestions:
Reform the Promotion System: The old DO rule was that the
only way an officer could be promoted was by recruiting sources, and the higher
up, the better. Bring a Soviet official into the fold, and you could count on
...