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Ignatius on Goss: Bolten and Negroponte did it!

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Sat May 06, 2006 at 08:55:06 AM PDT

Sometimes reading the beltway crowd after a major event such as the resignation of a senior administration official is a bit like watching adolescents play the game Clue. Each of them has their own peculiar take on the matter, usually based on what their own carefully watered and fertilized sources are spinning to them. Eventually (weeks, months, years?) we will get the real story, or some semblance of it, but until then, all we have is the spin.

So, for what it's worth, here's WaPo reporter and pundit extraordinaire David Ignatius' studied opinion on what was behind the sudden the Goss decapitation:

Goss and his aides were feuding with the agency's staff and with officials of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (DNI), the new bureaucratic canopy that overlays the CIA and 14 other intelligence agencies. One of Goss's senior aides was facing potential legal troubles in a bribery investigation; another he had brought over from Capitol Hill was scrambling to submit his resume to investment banks and other potential employers. Against this background, a White House emboldened by new chief of staff Josh Bolten decided it was time for "executive action," the euphemism the CIA once used for taking someone out. [...]

Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte, who favored replacing Goss, similarly spoke of "transition and reform." That's a gentle way of describing the past year of reorganization, which intelligence veterans say has been closer to chaos and disintegration. The CIA has been hit hardest by the bureaucratic shuffle, with Goss struggling to fend off poaching from Negroponte and his ever-expanding staff. Goss is said to have clashed with Negroponte and his deputy, retired Air Force Gen. Michael Hayden. He tried to block what he saw as a DNI effort to raid more analysts from the CIA's Counterterrorist Center and steer them to the DNI's National Counterterrorism Center.

Clever David. Executive action? This administration doesn't work that efficiently in my opinion, but who knows, maybe Bolten and Negroponte are in cahoots together. Certainly Negroponte, the genesis of death squads around the world, is known for having a very dark reputation. That Negroponte may have been trying to suborn Goss' position as part of a scheme to extend his own power and influence over intelligence matters is entirely possible. Still, why would Bush go along with axing the guy who was doing just what he had been asked to do: purge the CIA of anyone willing to tell unpleasant news to Cheney and Co? And why move so suddenly, without having a replacement already in the wings ready to go, his or her name having already been floated by various cable news gasbags and GOP friendly columnists? Of course, Ignatius also goes on to pin Goss' downfall on his poor management style:

What may have hurt Goss most inside the White House was sharp criticism from a hush-hush group known as the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board. This blue-ribbon group is headed by Stephen Friedman, a former chairman of Goldman Sachs and former White House economic adviser. Because its members include many prominent business executives, the board could offer a nonpartisan, CEO's view of how Goss was running the agency. I'm told some of the board's judgments on Goss and his management team were devastating.

Goss got off to a shaky start because he was seen as a man on a political mission. CIA officers regard themselves as professionals, doing a dangerous job for the country. They know they work for civilian bosses. But like military officers, they want to be treated with respect. Though Goss long ago served as a CIA case officer, he arrived from Capitol Hill with a phalanx of conservative aides, soon dubbed the "Gosslings," who viewed the agency as a liberal, leak-prone opponent of conservative causes. That image is mostly nonsense -- many of the people forced out by the Gosslings were ex-military officers who would be tempted to shoot Democrats on sight, and most veterans cheered Goss's effort to stop press leaks. Goss's attacks on senior officers were reckless, and they peeled away a generation of senior CIA managers. Sadly, the Bush White House mostly applauded his jihad on what they viewed as CIA naysayers.

Sorry, but I don't buy the Goss-as-lousy-CEO baloney. Certainly Goss' reign at CIA has been beyond heavy handed, but that would seem to be a plus as far as the neocons were concerned. They wanted CIA taken down a peg or two, and Goss' efforts to purge anti-Bush sentiment in the ranks was not something for which he can be blamed. There is no doubt that in this instance he was merely carrying out the President's wishes. Nor do I buy the idea that Goss is being canned for having disrupted and demoralized the Agency. I suspect that George Bush could give a rat's ass about dissension and low morale among the rank and file.

No, I suspect (as I'm sure you do also) there is something more to this story. Sudden, out of the blue resignations don't just happen in any administration. George Tenet was spinning in the winds for weeks before the hammer came down on his career at CIA. Absent a genuine scandal or some underlying and serious policy disagreement with the President, you don't just see any top aide, and certainly not the Director of CIA, tendering his resignation without any hint of it previously reaching the Press. The coup by Negroponte and Bolten suggested by Ignatius may have been in the works for all I know, but I doubt they would have jumped this precipitously without something more.

All the speculation on our side of the blogosphere suggests that Goss may have been deeply entangled in Hookergate, and maybe he was. But I have to wonder if something else may have caused him to abandon ship at this particular moment in time. I have to wonder if what Goss knows about Bush's plans for Iran might be behind all this. Perhaps Goss didn't want to be the scapegoat for the inevitable fallout that will come after we attack Iran. We know Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld freely blamed CIA and George Tenet for Iraq's failures. What would stop them from blaming Goss for the inevitable clusterfuck that would result from any attack on Iran, whether by nuclear or conventional means?

I could be all wrong, of course, regarding Goss' motives for leaving. Indeed, I hope I am, and that Goss' sudden departure is simply another sorry episode in our continuing saga of Republican greed and corruption during the reign of King George. I'd love for it to be something as mundane as all that, or as the result of administration infighting, as Ignatius suggests. But I fear the possibility of something much worse.

Tags: Porter Goss, resignation, CIA, John Negroponte, Josh Bolten, David Ignatius (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 12 comments

  •  Tips? (12+ / 0-)

    Also front paged at Booman Tribune.

    "I just had the basic view of the American public -- it can't be that bad out there." Marine Travis Williams after 11 members of his squad were killed.

    by Steven D on Sat May 06, 2006 at 08:51:45 AM PDT

  •  Add in Negroponte's complicity (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    smintheus, Steven D

    in Iran-Contra, and I'm afraid it's worse, too. Maybe Goss wouldn't or couldn't go along with the mass deception required to invade Iran.

    Durn, here's company. I'm just going to add some links and snips about the sex scandal. Maybe it will get Bush impeached before he attacks.

    Kyle "Dusty" Foggo, is the subject of a review by the CIA's inspector general. The agency is examining whether Foggo arranged for any contracts to be granted to companies associated with Brent R. Wilkes, a contractor and longtime friend of Foggo's who had connections to Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham (R-Calif.).

    Cunningham left Congress and was sentenced to more than eight years in prison for corruption. Foggo has said he has done nothing improper, and the agency has said the review is standard practice in such situations, not an indication of any wrongdoing. After Goss's announcement yesterday, Foggo told colleagues that he will resign next week. Last week, the agency confirmed that Foggo attended private poker games with Wilkes at a Washington hotel.

    Washington Post

    Mr. Goss's resignation also comes amid the controversy regarding the man he appointed to the CIA's third-highest post, Mr. Foggo. Mr. Foggo is under federal criminal investigation relating to the awarding of CIA contracts, people with knowledge of the inquiry said Friday.

    When Mr. Goss became CIA head in 2004, Mr. Foggo was his surprise choice for executive director. Although Mr. Foggo had been with the CIA for more than 25 years, he had mainly been assigned to middle-management logistical and administrative jobs, and had never held any senior headquarters position.

    Mr. Foggo has been a close friend since junior high school with Poway, Calif., defense contractor Brent R. Wilkes. The criminal investigation centers on whether Mr. Foggo used his postings at the CIA to improperly steer contracts to Mr. Wilkes's companies.

    Mr. Wilkes earlier this year was implicated in the charges filed against Mr. Cunningham, as an unindicted co-conspirator who allegedly had paid about $630,000 in bribes to Mr. Cunningham for help in obtaining federal contracts.

    WSJ free access for now (!)

    The NY Daily News has more -- very direct!

  •  Here's my take.... (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    cotterperson, saucy monkey
    • Goss is not personally involved in Twatergate (too sanctimonius), but his third man down, Foggo, is up to his liederhosen in it.
    • When it is becomes known that Foggo is involved, and that Foggo was horribly unqualified for this position (kind of procurement guy --not an analyst, spook or brain), there will be some --how shall I say -- blowback on the CIA.
    • Goss couldn't stop the leaks, and there have been many damaging leaks lately. They are firing non-leakers and can't seem to find the leakers (or the leakers are so highly placed that booting them would exacerbate the leak). Bush wants a better, more heavy-handed Director. This is a good sign for us in a way -- it means that the CIA rank and file has begun to draw blood in a way that worries the White House: Plame, Twatergate -- its all starting to actually do some damage.
    • He dueled with Negroponte. We created an intelligence Czar, god help us, and an intelligence Czar we shall get.

    So, great diary. I think you are on the right track and we need to stop speculating that Goss went to the Watergate, smoked cigars, and gave Jeff Gannon a blow job. That's entertaining stuff, but off the mark.

    If you hate government, don't run for office.

    by Bensdad on Sat May 06, 2006 at 09:37:52 AM PDT

  •  Tony Snow (0+ / 0-)

    better know what he is doing, because you have to believe that if he goes up on stage in Monday's briefing, floats this, and it turns out Goss was involved in more than an inter-departmental kerfuffle, he will have absolutely ruined any chance he had to turn over the non FOxites stenographers in the press room (I am including Malveaux, etc. in this group...)

    There is smoke, you have to wonder where the next turn will lead...

    "Just today, Senator McCain offered up the oldest Washington stunt in the book - you pass the buck to a commission to study the problem." Sen. Barack Obama

    by justmy2 on Sat May 06, 2006 at 10:18:29 AM PDT

  •  Goss was not fired because he's a fuck-up (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    cotterperson, smintheus

    The reason is obvious: NO ONE in this Administration has EVER been fired just because they were fucking up.  Doing a lousy job appears to be the equivalent of job insurance as far as W is concerned.

    It's either hookers, or he did something "disloyal" to The Decider.  

  •  It looks more obvious to me (0+ / 0-)

    Goss had to tighten partisan ship at the Agency, which he did.  And he purged a lot of people who "weren't delivering" what Bush, Cheney, and Rummie wanted.

    But from the sum picture, I believe it's pretty clear there were two things he didn't do that he was expected to.  Tenet held Dubya's hand and made it all easy for him, which f-d up everything in the long run, whereas Goss apparently brought Dubya everything in difficult and proper form.  But our Decider In Chief just found that too complicated and annoying quickly enough, if you read between the lines.

    What Negroponte wanted isn't too clear.  I'll guess a Seventies-type CIA jumping in to provide him and Bush/Cheney/Rummie with all the excuses and illegal cowboy initiatives they could want.

Permalink | 12 comments