Defense and Security

Intelligence

  • Intelligence
    Saddam's Delusions: The View from the Inside
    Play
    Watch the principal authors of the Pentagon's Joint Forces Command's "Iraq Perspective Project" Kevin Woods and James Lacey discuss the inner workings of Saddam Hussein's regime.
  • Intelligence
    Saddam's Delusions: The View from the Inside
    Play
    The key authors of the Pentagon’s secret study of Saddam Hussein’s regime, based on captured Iraqi documents and prisoner interviews, will discuss the Foreign Affairs article, “Saddam’s Delusions: The View from the Inside” (May/June 2006). This meeting is part of the Iraq: The Way Forward Series.  
  • United States
    Betts: Hayden Likely to Be Pressed in Confirmation Hearing on Wiretapping Issue
    Richard K. Betts, a CFR expert on the intelligence community, says that he sees no reason that the nomination of General Michael V. Hayden to head the Central Intelligence Agency should be blocked by Congress because of his military background. But he says that "there’s a powerful reason to consider opposing the nomination," citing Hayden’s role in domestic wiretapping without proper warrants by his National Security Agency.
  • Defense and Security
    Intelligence Support to the Military
    Jane Harman and John McLaughlin will discuss the role of intelligence in supporting the U.S. military in peacetime and wartime. As ranking member of the House Select Committee on Intelligence and former acting director of the Central Intelligence Agency, each offers a unique perspective into the challenges faced by the intelligence community in providing accurate and timely intelligence to American defense policy makers, military commanders, and the U.S. armed forces.12:00 - 12:30 p.m. Lunch Reception12:30 - 1:00 p.m. Meeting
  • Intelligence
    Intelligence, Policy, and the War in Iraq
    Play
    Council on Foreign RelationsGIDEON ROSE:  Ladies and gentlemen, would people please take their seats and quiet down so we can get started?Welcome to the Council on Foreign Relations and to our session this evening, intelligence, policy and Iraq, with Paul Pillar. Let me say a few things about tonight’s event.  Please remember to turn off your cell phones, BlackBerrys and all wireless devices.  Second, the meeting tonight is on the record, not off the record.  Third, it’s being teleconferenced so that council members around the nation and the world can participate via secure password-protected teleconference.  So you’re never that far from the council no matter where you go. Our speaker this evening is somebody who should be a familiar name to all of you, Paul Pillar, a pronounced, major national security expert who has spent the better part of the last two decades inside the intelligence community.  He’s the kind of guy who could tell you what he did, but he’d have to kill you afterward.  (Laughter.)  He’s recently left the community.  He is now teaching at Georgetown and has written an article for Foreign Affairs, which, of course, you all read since everyone goes home and reads their Foreign Affairs the first day they get it.  And he’s here to speak to us tonight about the politicization of intelligence and the general status of intelligence as it relates to Iraq and more. The problem with someone like Paul is there’s so many questions we could get him to talk about that it’s really going to be hard to limit it.  Let me start, therefore, very briefly by asking you to give a very short—(word inaudible)—of the kinds of politicization that you argue occurred in the intelligence process in the run-up to the Iraq war.Foreign Affairs Managing Editor Gideon Rose with Paul Pillar.PAUL R. PILLAR:  Okay, if you’re talking about politicization getting in—really, first of all, separate it into two areas—the public use of intelligence, and secondly, the possible impact on the work of the intelligence community itself.And the first one, the public use, what we’re talking about here is a highly selective use of, in many cases, raw intelligence—you know, uninformed by analysis, which is what we pay all those analysts in places like Langley and Fort Meade and Fort Bolling—Bolling Air Force Base—to do—in which the whole intelligence policy relationship kind of got stood on its head in that you have people in the policy arena doing the picking and choosing of raw (base?) of intelligence to make a point.  And intelligence officers left who register varying degrees of private protest if there were issues of credibility or whatever.  So that’s one whole area.The other area is less obvious and harder to deal with, but certainly one of at least as much concern to professional intelligence officers, and that’s the possible impact (of ?) the work of the intelligence community itself.  And there, the basic lesson we need to get is that politicization is not just a matter of arm twisting.  You know, we had a couple of these inquiries—the Senate Intelligence Committee with a previous report that they issued, and the Silberman-Robb commission, which I hasten to add I think overall did an excellent job in cataloging some of the shortcomings with regard to intelligence work on the Iraqi weapons of mass destruction issue.But in both cases, on the issue of this kind of politicization, they basically asked the question to analysts, were your arms twisted?  And the answer they got, not surprisingly, was no.  But politicization of this type, when it does occur, is almost never that blatant.  It’s not a matter of direct pressure.  It’s a matter of various other, more subtle, indirect ways, such as how does the intelligence community direct its resources on, you know, one particular angle versus another angle?  Is it because of judgments that intelligence officers have made as to where the actual threats are?  Or is it because of a series of politically inspired questions as to things to look at in order to develop a case, in this case, for war?It could be the almost subconscious effect on dozens of analysts throughout the community looking at dozens of different issues, from aluminum tubes to UAVs to you name it, in which there are subtle differences where it’s hard to point to any one thing, but subtle differences that reflect that political environment.And finally—and this is something that Silberman-Robb indeed did note—there is inconsistency in how draft assessments are treated in which ones that tend to conform with the policy preferences of the day make it through the gauntlet of review and coordination more easily than those that do not.  The commission did not ask them the follow-on question, why were managers treating these inconsistently?  And the answer to that—rather obvious in my view—is to avoid the unpleasantness of placing unwelcome assessments on the policymaker’s desk.So you’ve got those two broad areas—the public use and the possible impact on the intelligence community’s work itself.  And in the latter case, it’s always a matter of subtle, indirect influence, not a matter of blatant twisting of arms.ROSE:  So, if this process of politicization in various guises hadn’t occurred, the picture that the intelligence community would have presented would have differed how?  Perhaps it would look like Scandinavia, or what?PILLAR:  No, not at all.  With regard to the weapons of mass destruction issue, it—you know, I suspect we would not have had, you know, fundamental differences in the judgments.  You know, what we had was a, you know, widely shared—very widely shared—but, as it turned out, mistaken perception of the state of programs and stockpiles and so on.Some of these after-the-fact inquiries, such as that of the Senate Intelligence Committee, appropriately zeroed in on issues of wording and nuance and caveat and emphasis.  And that’s where I think the difference would have been—those subconscious or unconscious effects on those dozens of analysts writing those many different sentences and various assessments.  Things would have been trimmed and emphasized a little bit differently.But I’d hasten to add that on the two big issues on Iraq that were used by the administration, there’s a basic, fundamental difference between this one—the weapons of mass destruction issue—in which there was faulty intelligence analysis, insufficient collection in which we had a widely shared and, as it turned out, incorrect view, and then the issue of terrorism and alleged relationships or links with terrorist groups, and specifically al Qaeda, which, to put it quite bluntly, was a manufactured issue.  And there, there was nothing that was produced by the community in terms of its own assessments that judged any such relationship to anything close to an alliance or a patron-sponsor relationship.  Nonetheless, we’re well aware of how that issue was handled publicly and conveying the impression of an alliance, using raw bits of intelligence, which we then, you know, read in laundry lists in places like the Weekly Standard, as a basis for making that case.  That was one of the more obvious instances in which that kind of politicization took place.ROSE:  Albert Hirschman famously described the responses to organizations in decline or crisis as exit, voice or loyalty, arguing that people confronted with that kind of situation can leave, can try to change things from the inside, or can just keep quiet and go with the flow.  How did people respond to these pressures from above?  How did you respond to them?PILLAR:  The great majority of people who were wearing the badge respond when they come to work each day by trying to provide the best possible collection and analysis of intelligence that they can and being painfully aware of some of the constraints, which become particularly acute when they have to do something like present a paper face to face to a policymaker or testify before a congressional committee on the Hill, where they are very much aware of the fact that they are representing the executive branch, that there are serious constraints.  They would not treat things in the same way they would, undoubtedly, treat them if they were carrying before the same committee in a private capacity.A lot has been made, Gideon, of certain individual stories—people who depart and resign, you know, retire early.  I think a lot of that’s been overblown, quite frankly.  I mean, in my own case, I retired last year.  That’s exactly when I wanted to retire for 30 years.  As I was telling some people during the reception, I’m a professor who was locked inside a bureaucrat’s body and I’m glad to be out of it.  (Laughter.)  You know, every individual’s case is different.  There’s a different personal story.  There’s, you know, some of my colleagues who I think have had their names in the paper as, well, an early retirement, you know, forced out—something like this.  In any one instance, it might have been a case of, you know, the pros and cons between retiring now versus retiring later being almost in balance, and then one day, you know, there’s just enough to tip the balance where somebody goes home and tells his spouse, honey, now’s the time to do it; I’m going to retire.  And that’s, you know, that’s not really a new story.  It shouldn’t be, but a lot of news stories have been made out of this.ROSE:  Well, let me press you on this point.  Why didn’t you retire earlier?  Why was this article appearing in the March-April 2006 Foreign Affairs rather than the March-April 2003 Foreign Affairs?PILLAR:  My current job is as a political scientist and policy analyst.  Part of my job—my current one—is to write cogent essays on matters of public importance.  That’s what I tried to do in this instance.  My previous job before I retired last year was to provide the best possible intelligence analysis and to manage that analysis for whoever the policymaker is of the day.  I tried to do that job.  Sometimes we did it well, sometimes we didn’t.  But I was doing one job before, now I’m doing a different job.ROSE:  Okay.  So we have this article about a deluded leader living in a bubble, stumbling into war after being fed a steady diet of spin and lies by his sycophantic or ideologically extremist underlings.  (Laughter.)  Of course, I’m talking about the portrait of Saddam—(laughter)—in the May-June issue. PILLAR:  May-June issue—that’s—ROSE:  What’s kind of striking, though, is that it’s not—doesn’t seem to be all that far off, and what I find bizarre is that the penalties for dissent in the U.S. were substantially less than they were in Iraq.  (Laughter.)  There is a tidbit in the Saddam article about how a general who disagreed ended up sent in pieces to his wife later on and Shinseki retired.  And yet, it seems that the very modest pressures to not buck the trend, to continue to serve as a good soldier, to not incur the wrath of one’s superiors, or even, as you just said, to avoid the displeasure of putting on your boss’s desk something they didn’t want to see, was enough to, in some ways, pervert not just the intelligence community bureaucracy but the diplomatic bureaucracy—from the Gordon-Trainor book, the military bureaucracy comes off horribly. So are we learning here that you don’t need to be Saddam Hussein in order to get everybody beneath you to bend to your will.PILLAR:  I don’t think it’s that extreme, Gideon.  In fact, you know, myself and others did a number of things that, in retrospect, could be seen as taking risks, knowing full well that we would not be chopped up and delivered to our wives the next day.Let me just cite one example—and I continued to write in a private capacity on the outside while I was still wearing the government badge.  One point I’ve made when I’ve been asked about this about oh, why, you know, why didn’t you reveal this stuff earlier—as we’ve talked about—as revelations as subjects in my article in the journal.  In fact, there’s very little in that article that is a new revelation in the sense of something that hasn’t been reported, you know, in the media in one form or another before. And let me go beyond that and not just mention reporting of a fact, but giving my perspective—the whole issue of the, you know, alleged alliance with al Qaeda, and specifically, what did or did not Secretary Powell’s presentation at the United Nations in February of 2003 really demonstrate in that?  And one point I made briefly in the article was if you really go back over that transcript and read it very carefully, it doesn’t really say there’s any kind of assistance or cooperation or alliance, although clearly that was part of the impression that it was designed to create.Well, I wrote back in 2003 an additional introduction to my book on counterterrorism while I was still wearing the badge—and, of course, it had to go through all the approvals and everything for a current employee—in which I said exactly the same thing.  And I had some people read that and say my goodness, how did you get that approved?  Now, of course, you know, some introduction in the second edition of the book isn’t going to get the attention as a Foreign Affairs article will, but it was out there.  And if you wanted my take on that particular topic, you could have read this book, you know, two and a half years ago.ROSE:  Diverging for a second—I know people, including a lot of people in the agency, who think that that by itself is a problem and that Sharra’s book and that people shouldn’t be speaking out in public on matters relation to their professional capacities while their inside the intelligence services.PILLAR:  That’s right—well, yeah.  Well, Mike Sharra’s book was exceptional in that regard, which was, you know, a direct and very extended criticism of current policy.  And it’s hard to point to things that are anything comparable to that.  And there have been a lot of reactions procedurally in terms of how rules are interpreted as a result of Mike’s book.  You’re right, and I and others have, you know, gotten the criticism from both directions.  One direction—you know, why weren’t you saying this sort of stuff publicly earlier?  And the other direction, which I was getting at the time—why are you saying these things publicly?  I don’t know.  There’s a balance to be struck. I think it would be a grave mistake to have—wearing a government badge, being in the intelligence community or anywhere else—a prohibition against engaging in substantive discussion and debate in publication and speaking on the outside, because one of the things that would do, it would be a major disincentive for employment in our security services or government generally if people who, you know, are intellectually active, want to stay engaged are told no, you just can’t do that sort of thing.  You can’t give talks like this or the kind of talk I gave that was off the record that Bob Novak made a column out of.  You can’t talk to a class.  You can’t do this.  You know, if those sorts of restrictions had been placed on me, I think I would have left the service much earlier.ROSE:  Let’s turn to some substantive matters for a second.  You write that there was a strong consensus among serious observers before the war that containment was working and that Saddam was still in a box.  I remember actually saying—we (on over?) in the final version were saying gee, was that—would I really go along with that plea?  Do you stand by that?  It seems to me that there were a lot of people before the war and the Ken Pollack’s of the world and—(inaudible)—saying gee, containment is breaking down and having legitimate worry.PILLAR:  I think your extended piece in the new issue of the journal from Joint Forces Command history does a lot to support that in terms of how the sanctions eroded greatly, or contributed to the erosion, as well as all their own procedures to the Iraqi military capacity. That said, there certainly was the very legitimate argument along two grounds.  One, sanctions themselves were eroding in the sense that we had sanctions fatigue, and the Europeans and others were making it clear that there were limits.  Secondly, there was the point on the military side that Operation Southern Watch and the other efforts to enforce the no-fly zones and so on, which entailed a substantial military presence in Saudi Arabia, was itself a liability. Now, one immediately has to respond to that—well, which is the greater negative in terms of impact on U.S. perception in the Middle East?  Is it the troop presence in Saudi Arabia or is it actually fighting a war with a lot of casualties in Iraq?  I mean, you can argue that one out.But yes, there are legitimate—there was a legitimate case to be made.  I personally think it was outweighed by the opposite case, but it was legitimate.ROSE:  You mentioned the second edition of your book on terrorism.  I remember reading the first edition carefully thinking it was the best thing written on the subject at the time—and nonetheless, quite surprised when planes struck the World Trade Center not too long afterwards and by 19 hijackers ordered by a guy in a cave in Afghanistan.  Is the lesson of 9/11 and the lesson of the Iraqi WMD the same, which is we don’t know what’s going on, either what’s coming or what’s not coming, and that no matter what we do, we get screwed?PILLAR:  Well, in terms of 9/11 and being surprised, it’s the tactical surprise, and that’s a fact of life with regard to international terrorism.  It wasn’t a strategic surprise, you know.  And you can go—you can look at my book, which was mainly about counterterrorism, but you can look in a whole lot of other things.  You know, the strategic appreciation of the threat from jihadist terrorism and al Qaeda in particular was profound.  It motivated extensive efforts by the United States government through most of the Clinton administration and leading into the first few months of the Bush administration.  I’ve had people, for example, read Steve Coll’s Pulitzer Prize winning book “Ghost Wars” and react to it by commenting to me, my goodness, I didn’t know all that stuff was going on—that stuff being, extensive over several years, diplomatic, military, intelligence and other efforts to go after this particular leader and this particular group.One of the myths that’s been unfortunately accentuated by the 9/11 commission—because they set as part of their agenda—as their agenda getting public support for their particular plan for intelligence community reorganization—was the myth that there was a strategic lack of awareness of this threat.  That’s simply not true.  And if there were still more things that weren’t done—and a couple of things that come to mind are, number one, very extensive and expensive security countermeasures of the sort that we did enact after 9/11—you know, Department of Homeland Security and all the rest.  Or number two, doing something like Operation Enduring Freedom, the military intervention in Afghanistan, before 9/11.  There were very good reasons we didn’t do that.  I mean, the main reason we didn’t do the second was that there were important other policy considerations—foreign policy considerations—involving South Asia, involving Pakistan, involving Afghanistan, the policymakers being worried about, you know, the Pakistani nuclear equation vis-a-vis India and all those sorts of things. And as to why not, you know, extensive new, major, counterterrorist security measures, it’s been a fact of life for decades in this republic that we as a people do not do expensive, risky things just based on warning.  We do them after a disaster has occurred.  And I think that the outstanding recent example is Hurricane Katrina and the failure to protect New Orleans from a much-predicted—much-predicted—hurricane-induced flood.  Before it happens, pennies are pinched, the Corps of Engineers’ budget is being cut.  After it happens, $60 billion appropriated at the flick of a gavel.  This was just another example of that.ROSE:  Oh, but of course, the Bush administration’s preemption policy was a direct response to that.  And yet, in the Iraq case, it seems to have had its own comeuppance. So to what extent is the—do I sense that the lessons of Iraq contradict the lessons of 9/11 and vice versa?PILLAR:  I don’t see it in those sort of contradictory terms.  The idea of preemption, in my personal view, is not a universally workable solution to apply to the international terrorist threat, particularly as it relates to the way that threat has evolved to one of more groups than of states.  There was a lot of effort to try to preempt the group.  And we talk about renditions and going after the infrastructure and going after finances.  Extensive efforts were being made on that back in the 1990s.  Some of them have become more effective since 9/11 because our officials can go and pound on the tables of their foreign counterparts and say we mean it this time.  Yes, we want you to freeze those funds and the American people are really upset about it now, which is what they couldn’t say in 1997 or ‘98 or ‘99.  So I don’t see that as a sort of direct contradiction.  It’s really nonparallel issues.ROSE:  I’m going to turn it over to our audience in one second.  Let me just ask one last question. You have spent the better part of your career inside the system dealing with incredibly classified intelligence obtained through various secret methods.  The vast majority of the members of the Council on Foreign Relations have to—and the public at large, need I say—have to form their opinions and choices about foreign policy and political matters without the benefit of that.  How different does the world look when you have to rely only on open source intelligence from the way the world looks when you’re dealing every day with the secret stream of stuff that comes in from all our various methods?PILLAR:  Well, most things on most of the important aspects that figure in the policy debates, it doesn’t look that much different at all.  And just to take the example of Iraq and before the decisions or before we actually went to war, the assessments that I referenced in the article about likely postwar challenges, almost none of that—almost none—was based on, you know, secret information.  It was a matter of assessment based on the expertise of experts we could consult with which, in turn, was based on history, culture, geopolitical facts that really are all open source.  There’s not a matter of secrets there.That said, I think your question, Gideon, is a useful hook on which to issue the reminder of when we look at other issues like Iran, like North Korea—we have this very salient issue of the Iranian nuclear program that’s troubling us now—we have to remind ourselves just what we don’t know—what we don’t know.  The we—I mean not just the public, not just members of the Council on Foreign Relations, but everybody, including the ones reading the cables at Langley. I noticed that Ambassador Negroponte had some testimony on the Hill a couple of weeks ago—the annual worldwide threat testimony—in which he made a statement that got some press attention about North Korea.  Now, we’ve had this widespread presumption that North Korea probably already has some bombs in the basement.  And Mr. Negroponte said well, we don’t know that; we don’t know whether they have nuclear weapons.  And I had a journalist call me up and ask, why would he say that?  You know, why would the DNI say publicly we don’t know that?  I said I think he said it because it’s true.  We don’t know that.  You know, there are sound bases for making the analytic judgment based on how many reactors they’ve had going and how much plutonium they could have produced and so on, that they probably have enough fissile material for several weapons, but we don’t know that. And in the case of Iran, the public debate—much of it—seems to have taken it as an article of faith and taken it for granted that this country, this regime, is definitely pursuing nuclear weapons.  My own personal assessment is that that is their current course—current course.  But again, we don’t know that.  There isn’t some secret out there.  There isn’t some report out there, that I’m aware of, that closes that issue, that says for sure that that’s the case.  So yeah, there’s a lot of ignorance there, but don’t—maybe it’s in one sense a bright note and in another sense a gloomy note.  But those of you who don’t read the secret cables really aren’t that far behind, you know, on most of the important issues of foreign policy, those who do.ROSE:  Okay.  With that, let’s turn it over to the audience.  Let me just remind you to wait for the microphone and speak directly into it, to stand, state your name and affiliation, and limit yourself to one question, and keep it concise so that we can get as many in as possible.Yes, over here.QUESTIONER:  Gary Sick, Columbia University.  I first of all want to say that the professionals that I talk to all say that you are the professional’s professional and that they really do respect what you say and where you come from, and that means a lot to me.I had the opportunity to talk to a group of CIA analysts recently at a retreat sort of operation and I was struck by the fact that the question that I kept getting from the floor, from these people who were senior analysts with the CIA, were how do you deliver bad news to the boss?  How do you tell him that what he thinks or what he wants to think isn’t really true?  And I tried to answer that question, but I wonder what your answer is to that question.PILLAR:  Well, Gary, there are many, you know, courses that try to find a way to work around exactly that sort of dilemma.  One of the first things that come to mind is—and I’ve had many policymakers, you know, react to intelligence assessments, including ones that aren’t very optimistic, by saying you aren’t showing us the opportunities.  You’re just showing us the problems.  Show us the opportunities.  Now, that’s a very legitimate demand to make, a very legitimate question to make.  And good intelligence analysis ought to not have to wait for that demand to be made, but to, you know, work it in to the assessment.So even the gloomiest, least welcome kind of analysis always ought to be—this is what ought to go through analysts’ mind—ought to be coupled with all right, so it’s a bad situation.  So what can we do to help make sense of it, at least to show the opportunities for making it less bad?  And that’s the main thing that comes to mind as something that—the community by and large tries to do this—sometimes not always successfully, as is indicated by the fact that policymakers do come back with the oh, you just gave me the bad news; you didn’t give me the opportunities.  That’s the main thing to do.QUESTIONER:  But doesn’t that shade over to being policy prescriptive if you’re trying to point the—PILLAR:  Yes, it comes very close to it.  And actually, the people who get most nervous about the policy prescriptiveness of things or coming close to that line are the intelligence officers.  And in discussions in Washington—particularly not so much the papers, but the face-to-face meetings—usually the policy types are much more relaxed about, you know, seeing the intel types just participate fully in the debate and discussion and not try to draw some line—well, I’m the intelligence person, so I’m going to make this assessment, but I’m not going to go beyond that.It is still incumbent on the intelligence types to recognize and observe that line, even if there are attempts on the other side of the table to draw them in.  But yes, that’s always a fine line that’s being walked.  You’re right.ROSE:  Over here.QUESTIONER:  Maurice Tempelsman, Leon Tempelsman & Son.  Thank you very much for a very enlightening presentation. Let me approach my question from a perspective of methodology.  The facts are not looked at deus ex machina.  You can look at them through a perspective of capability.  You can look at it through a perspective of intention.  But there’s a third dimension, which is context and the judgment of how much context affects precisely the subjectivity that is inherent in your statement of politicization.And let’s step back from the current even to the Cold War and taking a look at heavy investment in intelligence during the Cold War over many years, the conclusions that were drawn at the time, ranging all the way from the missile gap and Adlai Stevenson’s presentations to the U.N.What lessons can we draw with the distance of history and the advantage of a situation, which is closer to having played out, and therefore, we can analyze better?  What lessons can we draw in order to particularly evaluate the effect of context on how information is judged and how that is taken into the decision-making process?PILLAR:  I think it takes a whole course to really answer your question, and I’ll try to answer it this way.  We—the collective we, whether it’s an intelligence officer or the public that is looking critically at assertions or statements based on intelligence—we need to remind ourselves that the zeitgeist, the context of the moment, does change.  And you know, I’ve written about this one very intense, very salient, very recent and very important issue.  And in my professional experience, going back over the last three decades, I haven’t seen anything quite like this.  There are a couple of things that start to come close to it. Nonetheless—I think this is what your question is implying, and I agree with the implication that we always need to be aware that even though we somehow think we’ve overcome whatever it was—the bias or the zeitgeist—that’s afflicted us most recently, there’s going to be another one around the corner, and we’re going to be wading deeply into it before we realize that we’ve waded into it. So in the Iraq case, for example, even if there is a great increase in skepticism about things like preemptive attacks and weapons of mass destruction by rogue states and everything, even if whatever biases or blinders we might have had on that set of issues is somehow corrected or balanced—I’m not suggesting we’re going to be able to succeed in doing that—there’s going to be some other issue entirely different that will be a subject of headlines, say, five years from now.  And it will be the subject of intelligence officers trying to write assessments that are going to become controversial.  We can’t even predict now, but we’re going to have to remember before that whatever that debate on whatever that subject, this is going to come up, that there’s going to be some kind of zeitgeist.  There’s going to be some kind of context that’s going to have its own biases and its own pressures on people like intelligence officers, and we’re going to try to recognize it as early as we can.  That’s the only way I can respond.QUESTIONER:  (Off mike)—and former head of the Congressional Research Service, Foreign and Defense Policy Division.There’s been a great deal of attention and focusing on the intelligence policymaking relationship on the question of whether the policymakers influenced or shaped the kinds of judgments that the intelligence community came out with, and you’ve addressed that, I think, with great sensitivity.But it was almost my understanding that once the intelligence community came out with its majority judgments, it was the responsibility of the policymakers to then challenge that from left, right and center, and not to just say oh, we now have an intelligence judgment that allows us to take a prescribed set of policies.In your experience, are there cases where the policymakers have seriously challenged the intelligence judgment to come out with a more sophisticated understanding and a better sense of what policy should be, had they not seriously challenged the intelligence community judgments?PILLAR:  They should challenge.  And I think the general answer is yes, there have been instances, but it’s hard to point to any one that’s a net-plus because all of the challenges that come to mind—not just in this recent past with the issue we’ve been dealing with, but others in my experience—have been always challenges in one direction.  You know, it’s sort of like the statisticians talking about one-tailed versus two-tailed tests.  And quite frankly, some of the things that have been described as policymaker challenges to the intelligence have not been that at all, but if anything, have been the other way around. I’ll get very specific here—Mr. Bolton on some of his issues of concern regarding Cuba and regarding Syria.  Some of what he did—and of course, this came up when his nomination was in question for U.N. ambassador.  Some of what he did was defended on grounds that well, he was just challenging what the intelligence officers were saying.  No, it’s the exact opposite.  He came up with a judgment, tried to get the community to sign onto it and wouldn’t countenance being challenged by intelligence officers who said wait a minute, the intelligence doesn’t go that far.  And so the response according to reports—I wasn’t a fly on the wall in this case—was, number one, to respond with an angry fit; and number two, when that didn’t work, to go to the person’s boss and try to get him or her removed from their job. That is one of the rare, rare instances of what I would describe as blatant attempts at politicization.  My point that I made in response to getting this first question, you recall, was that politicization, when it does occur, is almost never in response to that sort of thing.  At a minimum, you’ll get intelligence officers’ dander up.But I have a hard time thinking of any one instance in which there was a, you know, very beneficial, balanced, you know, two-tailed test challenged in both directions where the attitude is—this would be wonderful if this is the policymaker response—I’m totally open, you know; I don’t have a policy direction here.  I don’t want to be wrong in this direction and I don’t want to be wrong in that direction, so let me challenge you on both.  That would be the best possible thing.  I can’t think of any one instance when that’s happened.  It’s always a challenge in one direction.  And sometimes—sometimes—that helps—and you know, some of the Team B stuff on strategic forces and so on.I think, in retrospect, one can say, on balance, some of that kind of challenge, even though it was in one direction, was probably—brought us collectively closer to a more accurate perception.  So you know, I’d name an example like that.  But the best instance is if it’s challenge based on total openness, challenge in both directions.  And I can’t think of any instance of that.ROSE:  Right here in front.QUESTIONER:  Mr. Pillar, my name is Roland Paul.  I’m a lawyer.  I’ve been in the government a couple of times, which included a couple of excursions over to Langley.Your article is very good analysis of the intelligence process.  It’s become—it’s kind of a pitch—been characterized, as Gideon—you know, that the war was a mistake.  And you’ve had some very good, profound analysis—policy analysis evidence in some of your remarks today.So my question is going to be, what is your bottom line about the war, and just why?  And let me just give you three reference points that you can take.  David Kay is on the record several times saying he thought the war was a good idea mainly because he feared the scientists were going to get the WMD or sell the WMD to the terrorists.  Secretary Rumsfeld in this room when I asked him after the war, long after the war, what was your reason, he said because we were afraid that WMD—that Saddam would get WMD or he would give it to the terrorists.  And the third one is President Bush in his interview with Bob Woodward when Woodward said there were no WMDs; Bush says well, but he would have gotten it quickly and that was good enough for me.What is your view on the war?PILLAR:  Well, I’ll answer that in two parts.  One, if you want my bottom line right up front, I believe the war was a mistake.  And I answer that mainly from the standpoint of an old counterterrorist officer who considers international terrorism, you know, one of my main concerns.  There was absolutely no question in my mind that, on balance, the impact of this effort on the danger of international terrorism, killing more Americans, has made it worse.  Iraq is the newest and most salient jihad of the radical Islamists.  It’s serving some of the same function that Afghanistan served before as a training ground, as an inspiration, as a networking opportunity.   And on top of that, since it’s we rather than the Soviets who are the invaders, there’s a huge propaganda bonus for the extremists.  We can see it in the polls.  We can see it in a lot of other things.  It has made things worse with regard to countering terrorism.The second part of my response to your question, though—and this gets back to some of the things—the way I think the argument I make in the article, I hope, is treated—there were legitimate grounds for arguing for Operation Iraqi Freedom—totally different grounds—not the WMD stuff and certainly not the terrorist stuff.  As I say, the business about al Qaeda linkages was basically a manufactured issue, and I commend to you Peter Bergen’s op-ed in The New York Times the other day in terms of, you know, how this issue has popped up again a little bit.  I think Peter batted it down quite effectively.Some people who have commended what I wrote—mostly old friends and colleagues in the intelligence community—think I was too kind to the administration in imputing as their major motive for this operation the desire to shake up the sclerotic politics of the Middle East and try to use it as a catalyst for democratization.  Some people say oh, you should talk about Israel and oil and Halliburton and all kinds of other motives like that.  And I’m not denying that some of these other things were factors.  But I think, you know, most of what we’ve been hearing more recently from the administration about democratic change was all along the main motivation.  And there was a legitimate argument to be made along those lines. I happen to believe that the administration is right that there does need to be change in that region, that the closed political and economic systems do have a lot to do with extremists and terrorist threats against the United States.  And the administration has done some effective things and continues to do it on other grounds—not the Iraq war, but things like the Middle East Partnership Initiative and other things designed over the long term to try to lay the basis for a more open, more democratic, more liberal set of societies in the Middle East.Now, one could have argued that—and some people whom I respect, who aren’t part of the administration, but who know an awful lot about the Middle East, were on balance in favor of the war because for precisely that reason:  that this roll of the dice, known as Operation Iraqi Freedom, was worth the risk in order to bring about this—try to bring about this needed shaking up of the Middle East.  There will be an alternative view with which I would identify myself, that even though you need the change and even though you can do these other things—like these other programs I mentioned, and they’re important—that this particular effort to use military force as a kind of catalyst was more likely to backfire.  We needed—we, the country—needed a debate between those opposing points of view.  And there were other relevant points of view that could have been and should have been part of that debate, including the viewpoint that we don’t really need to care about, you know, the internal structures in the Middle East.  That’s another argument; I happen to disagree with it.But we never had that debate.  Instead, we’ve spent all our time and effort talking about things like aluminum tubes and did Mohamed Atta have a meeting in Prague.  And I don’t think those were the most important things that needed to be debated in deciding whether or not this particular expedition was on balance and worthwhile.ROSE:  Did I hear you correctly?  Did you just say that some of your old colleagues in the intelligence community thought that Israel, Halliburton and oil were important reasons why we went to war?PILLAR:  No, I shouldn’t have identified that just with old colleagues in the intelligence community.  I mean, of course, there’s the—I think the now well-known piece by Walt and Mearsheimer on the Israel angle.  Oil and—you know, of course, oil’s a factor.  Some of you may have seen Ted Koppel’s piece a month or so ago on that in which he said, you know, we shouldn’t be ashamed of that.  I agree with that.  I have hesitated to say oil as a motive because that immediately gets in the shortened version of remarks or an article, that it becomes translated into the simplistic, Muslim-in-street view, oh, they conquered Iraq to control oil. No, I don’t think that was the case at all.  It figured in different ways.  One, Iraq’s oil wealth is one of the reasons it’s very important and why, if you were hoping to pick one place to be a catalyst to shake up the rest of the region, that’s one of the reasons, because it’s important for that reason.  And the other way it worked in is that some of the pro-war elements—and I think Mr. Wolfowitz, for one, was very explicit about this—had the belief that because of Iraq’s oil wealth, we would not have to worry about a costly reconstruction because it would pay for itself.  Well, of course, it hasn’t worked out that way.  But it’s not a matter of well, we just conquered this country to control the oil resources.  I never believed that for a moment.ROSE:  Ted Sorensen.QUESTIONER:  Thanks very much for a very good presentation.  Your last answer convinces me I should ask the question I’ve been trying to ask all along.Regardless of (fables ?) like policymaker, were any of those who politicized the intelligence through distortion, arbitrary selection and so on officially inside the intelligence community?PILLAR:  I have suggested—although I identified this as one that is less obvious in the public use and, you know, in the non-use of intelligence in decision-making—that yes, I believe in the subtle ways I described earlier in response to a previous question there was what I would describe as politicization.  It’s not necessarily even conscious.  It’s not inspired by a political or policy preference.  It’s more of a response to an atmosphere, a pressure, a zeitgeist, the sorts of things we talked about before, but the intelligence community is not blameless. I don’t want to—if you’re trying to get at, you know, particular individuals or particular officials, I just don’t want to do that because I don’t think it’s mainly a problem of that.  It’s mainly a matter of structure, atmosphere and how this particular issue played out as it was used by this particular administration.If all of us in the community were men and women of perfect courage as well as insight, the intelligence community would have said different things and would have made different judgments, at least in the way that I’ve suggested earlier.ROSE:  Over here.  No, you first, and then Gary.QUESTIONER:  My name in James Tunkey and I’m with a company called Eye on Asia. I’d like to pick up on Ted’s point but perhaps go at it from a different angle.  Leadership is very important.  What leadership qualities should the American people be demanding of their intelligence leaders?PILLAR:  I think the main qualities are those that we’d demand in any other highly responsible position of public service.  It’s not unique to intelligence.  It’s a matter of integrity, knowledge, commitment, all those sorts of things.In terms of what might be different with regard to the intelligence community leadership, hard to separate it, you know, separate the qualities of the leaders from the structure and the atmosphere in which they have to operate.  I mean, I’ve made some suggestions in my piece about perhaps redoing the structure a bit while stopping short of recommending any new reorganization next week in a way that, you know—a man or a woman of intelligence, character and integrity and all those other qualities that we would value—say in any Cabinet secretary—would function very effectively as leader of our community.One of the, you know, best-remembered directors of Central Intelligence is George H.W. Bush.  He only served for a year back in 1976 toward the end of the Ford administration.  But that center out there in Langley is named after him and that reflects a lot of sentiment among those who had some experience with the elder Mr. Bush as director of the very high respect he earned in just that one year.  And he was a politician.  He was a political figure.  Some people have criticized the issue of, you know, the appointment of Mr. Goss, the current director of CIA.  Well, this is an elected politician, a Republican—you know, all this.  I think Mr. Goss does not deserve some of the bad press that he’s gotten.  And indeed, there are some respects in which an elected politician, be he a Republican or a Democrat, has insights into certain things that people like myself who have been career, you know, analysts or bureaucrats don’t have—trying to make sense, for example, of this political morass in Iraq and going back over these last couple of elections for the constituent assembly and the later legislature. I was in the little bit of time that—I sort of overlapped.  I say sort of because I was really working for the National Intelligence Council and not really part of the CIA, but was in, you know, some briefings.  I was quite impressed with Mr. Goss, as someone who has stood for office himself—his understanding of and insight into some of the questions that were related to elections and that part of the political process, which your typical analyst is just not going to have the experience to relate to.ROSE:  Let me (think about that ?). We have a question from a national member, William Lockhauser (ph) from Reston, Virginia, who asks, how accurate do you think the assessment—how accurate is the intelligence coming from Iraq being currently presented to the president? And what I would say in that regard—we had a session here the other day with the council fellow, Vali Nasr, and one of the things he was saying was that there were some taboo subjects.  Used to be you couldn’t talk about the insurgency—they didn’t want to hear.  Then you couldn’t talk about communal conflict—didn’t want to hear it in the military.  And now he was saying there’s some things like foreign aid to various forces—talking about Jordan and Saudi Arabia and helping the Sunnis—that people don’t want to hear about it.Do you think the policy—and so, therefore, were not getting reported back up the chain.  Do you think that there are—is an accurate picture of what’s going on in Iraq being presented to senior policymakers today?PILLAR:  Well, greetings to Reston, first of all.  I wasn’t aware, you know, when I was still wearing the badge, and I don’t perceive now, that sort of thing.  I simply don’t.  There are issues that arise in terms of what kind of terminology to use publicly and what things are emphasized publicly with regard to well, is it the Syrians and Iranians causing all this mess or is it more home grown?  But in terms of what is being reported inside, I’m not aware of any, you know, curtailment of information.  What happens when something, you know, makes it as far as the White House, and you know, what happens inside there I just don’t know.  But in terms of things coming out of the field and things coming out of the intelligence community, I don’t think that’s a problem.ROSE:  Do you think an accurate picture is being given to the people back home?PILLAR:  I think so, yes.  And I would note—you know, I give General Abizaid a lot of credit.  He’s the one who very early on, you know, used the term insurgency—you know, well before many others, you know, felt comfortable using that term.  And I think he was right to do that.ROSE:  Gary Rosen.QUESTIONER:  I’m Gary Rosen from Commentary Magazine. I wanted to press you a little bit more on what you understand the motives of the administration to have been in going to war.  I was struck in the article early on.  You say explicitly that intelligence on Iraqi weapons programs did not drive its decision to go to war, yet you go on to say that there was this wide consensus in the United States and abroad that sanctions were working and that we had Saddam in a box. To my mind, thinking back on that moment, there were lots of people outside of the administration—people in the journalistic community, who by no means are thought of as neoconservatives—Bill Keller, David Remnick, Ken Pollack—coming from a background like yours—Fareed Zakaria—who thought that sanctions were in fact not working.  So lots of people across the spectrum.  But then you go on to say that the administration arrived at so different a policy solution—that is, rejected sanction—shows that the decision to topple Saddam was driven by other factors—namely, the notion of spreading democracy and liberalization of the Middle East.How are you certain of that?  How do you know what their real motives were?PILLAR:  I don’t know any more than I know what the motives of the mullahs in Tehran are about whether they’re seeking nuclear weapons.  I don’t think I said there was a consensus, you know, against the war.  I think I said, you know, there were a lot of people who believed that.  You cited some of the distribution opinion in the United States.  I think if you broaden that to outside the United States and look at our European allies where the same perceptions about the weapons program were very widely shared but the policy consensus—and there, I think, you could call it a consensus—was very different and very much opposed. So, you know, if you look at that whole, broad spectrum inside and outside the U.S. of policy preferences on the war and try to correlate that—because it doesn’t correlate very well—with the even more broadly held, mistaken perception about the weapons, it clearly wasn’t the main reason.  Because people who shared the perception had very different policy preferences.  Was it an important, you know, part of the case?  Of course it was.  It was an essential part of the case.  But in terms of what drove it—you know, if we were to expand on this topic—I were to expand, and I’d go back to, you know, 1991, the whole sense of unfinished business, not overthrowing Saddam then, there is a neoconservative literature out there where I think you can trace this concern about Iraq that goes far beyond the WMD issue.ROSE:  Just two more questions because we’re running out of time. Here in the front.QUESTIONER:  Thank you.  John Temple Swing. I was fascinated by the news reporting on your article, which I heard a good deal about in public radio and other sources before I actually read your article.  And most of the sense I got from reading all the news reports was that your article more or less proved conclusively, or at lest convincingly, that the administration did not base its reason for going to war on the intelligence it was getting from the intelligence community, and that in a very large sense, therefore, it was irrelevant.  I did not read that or find that in your actual article, and I haven’t heard that really here tonight. So was the initial reporting on your article wrong?PILLAR:  No, it’s not.  Read the article again.  (Laughter.)  And I’ll just recap a couple of things.  There was a point that was just raised by Mr. Rosen with regard to how the whole WMD issue did or did not figure into it.  On the other big, you know, public selling issue—the supposed, you know, alliance with Saddam—the intelligence community was not saying that at all.  In fact, they were saying something much different.  There was not an alliance.  It was, at most, you know, two very different parties that are opposed in many ways that were kind of keeping track of each other.  They had a couple of contacts years ago in Sudan and that was it.  So the public line was diametrically opposed. There’s the issue of all right, even though we all seem to agree he’s got a weapons program, how long is it going to be before he gets them?  Even the badly flawed, infamous national intelligence estimate on the subject said he’s probably still several years away from getting it—not urgent.  We had the vice president say I think he’s real close to getting them and it is urgent.  And then there’s whole issue of what kind of challenges are we going to have to deal with after we invade? And part of, you know, the first section of the article was the assessments being offered was we’re going to have a mess.  It’s going to be long, difficult, turbulent.  We’re going to have these different ethnic and sectarian communities at their throats.  We’re going to have a civil war if we’re not going to sit on top of it.  No evidence that that really was cranked into the decision at all.  So I think there’s ample evidence that no, this decision did not rest on what the intelligence community offered.ROSE:  Did you think that at any point anybody in senior positions in the administration believed that Iraq was connected to 9/11?PILLAR:  I think there is some evidence with one or two people.  Mr. Wolfowitz seems to be one, from one or two quotes that I’ve seen.  I hope that didn’t last very long, but I can’t rule it out.  At lest a couple of people for at least a while believed that, yes.ROSE:  Last question over here—unfortunately.QUESTIONER:  I’m David Robinson.  A technical question:  The change that’s come about—I’m a physicist.  If you look at the NIE, you see when there was an expert on atomic energy, he said aluminum tubes were not for centrifuges.  When you had an Air Force person looking at airplanes, he said those airplanes are not useful for us to spread germ warfare.  I don’t know if there was anybody there who knew about biological warfare, but anybody who said that it’s good to have mobile labs making biological weapons where you need extra pressure—internal pressure—and a lot of safety would say that’s a stupid way to do it.  These dissenting voices at least (enter into it ?).  Now with the new and then—nonetheless, the consensus was opposed to that.  And the same person who said—Air Force—the planes weren’t right would say that the tubes were okay because he was an Air Force guy.Is there a—with the new changes, do you think these dissenting voices could make it into an intelligence estimate?PILLAR:  They do—they did make it in.QUESTIONER:  No, I was talking about with the centralization, which came afterwards.  Do you think they could still get that kind of information?PILLAR:  Oh, yes.  That has no affect on it whatsoever.  You mean the December ‘04 intelligence reorganization?  Has no affect on it whatsoever.  You’re still going to have—if particular agencies have dissents on views in community documents, including national intelligence estimates, they will be there.I’ll make this my closing point.  We had all that discussion and debate about that reorganization, that the scheme the 9/11 commission came up with didn’t address this set of issues at all—did not address it at all.  I don’t think it makes it any worse, but it doesn’t make it any better. Basically, the DNI—Ambassador Negroponte is in the same position vis-a-vis the White House and the policymakers that a DCI like George Tenet was.  There are a lot of other flaws that we don’t have time to go into now, in my view, with regard to—not a lot, but some other flaws—with regard to the reorganization.  I think the Congress will have to readdress it.  I was on the Hill just yesterday talking to some House members making this point.  I don’t know if they’ll readdress it next year or three years from now or five years from now, but my message to them was whenever you do readdress it—and some of these flaws have to do with things like ambiguity in the DNI’s authority—whenever you do readdress it, address this set of issues, too.  You didn’t last time.ROSE:  With that, Paul, we could talk about this for a very long time.  Unfortunately, one of the council’s most hallowed traditions is letting everybody get out of here at the right time.  So with that, we’re going to close it up.  Thank you very much.  (Applause.)(C) COPYRIGHT 2006, FEDERAL NEWS SERVICE, INC., 1000 VERMONT AVE.NW; 5TH FLOOR; WASHINGTON, DC - 20005, USA.  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.  ANY REPRODUCTION, REDISTRIBUTION OR RETRANSMISSION IS EXPRESSLY PROHIBITED.UNAUTHORIZED REPRODUCTION, REDISTRIBUTION OR RETRANSMISSION CONSTITUTES A MISAPPROPRIATION UNDER APPLICABLE UNFAIR COMPETITION LAW, AND FEDERAL NEWS SERVICE, INC. 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Council on Foreign RelationsGIDEON ROSE:  Ladies and gentlemen, would people please take their seats and quiet down so we can get started?Welcome to the Council on Foreign Relations and to our session this evening, intelligence, policy and Iraq, with Paul Pillar. Let me say a few things about tonight’s event.  Please remember to turn off your cell phones, BlackBerrys and all wireless devices.  Second, the meeting tonight is on the record, not off the record.  Third, it’s being teleconferenced so that council members around the nation and the world can participate via secure password-protected teleconference.  So you’re never that far from the council no matter where you go. Our speaker this evening is somebody who should be a familiar name to all of you, Paul Pillar, a pronounced, major national security expert who has spent the better part of the last two decades inside the intelligence community.  He’s the kind of guy who could tell you what he did, but he’d have to kill you afterward.  (Laughter.)  He’s recently left the community.  He is now teaching at Georgetown and has written an article for Foreign Affairs, which, of course, you all read since everyone goes home and reads their Foreign Affairs the first day they get it.  And he’s here to speak to us tonight about the politicization of intelligence and the general status of intelligence as it relates to Iraq and more. The problem with someone like Paul is there’s so many questions we could get him to talk about that it’s really going to be hard to limit it.  Let me start, therefore, very briefly by asking you to give a very short—(word inaudible)—of the kinds of politicization that you argue occurred in the intelligence process in the run-up to the Iraq war.Foreign Affairs Managing Editor Gideon Rose with Paul Pillar.PAUL R. PILLAR:  Okay, if you’re talking about politicization getting in—really, first of all, separate it into two areas—the public use of intelligence, and secondly, the possible impact on the work of the intelligence community itself.And the first one, the public use, what we’re talking about here is a highly selective use of, in many cases, raw intelligence—you know, uninformed by analysis, which is what we pay all those analysts in places like Langley and Fort Meade and Fort Bolling—Bolling Air Force Base—to do—in which the whole intelligence policy relationship kind of got stood on its head in that you have people in the policy arena doing the picking and choosing of raw (base?) of intelligence to make a point.  And intelligence officers left who register varying degrees of private protest if there were issues of credibility or whatever.  So that’s one whole area.The other area is less obvious and harder to deal with, but certainly one of at least as much concern to professional intelligence officers, and that’s the possible impact (of ?) the work of the intelligence community itself.  And there, the basic lesson we need to get is that politicization is not just a matter of arm twisting.  You know, we had a couple of these inquiries—the Senate Intelligence Committee with a previous report that they issued, and the Silberman-Robb commission, which I hasten to add I think overall did an excellent job in cataloging some of the shortcomings with regard to intelligence work on the Iraqi weapons of mass destruction issue.But in both cases, on the issue of this kind of politicization, they basically asked the question to analysts, were your arms twisted?  And the answer they got, not surprisingly, was no.  But politicization of this type, when it does occur, is almost never that blatant.  It’s not a matter of direct pressure.  It’s a matter of various other, more subtle, indirect ways, such as how does the intelligence community direct its resources on, you know, one particular angle versus another angle?  Is it because of judgments that intelligence officers have made as to where the actual threats are?  Or is it because of a series of politically inspired questions as to things to look at in order to develop a case, in this case, for war?It could be the almost subconscious effect on dozens of analysts throughout the community looking at dozens of different issues, from aluminum tubes to UAVs to you name it, in which there are subtle differences where it’s hard to point to any one thing, but subtle differences that reflect that political environment.And finally—and this is something that Silberman-Robb indeed did note—there is inconsistency in how draft assessments are treated in which ones that tend to conform with the policy preferences of the day make it through the gauntlet of review and coordination more easily than those that do not.  The commission did not ask them the follow-on question, why were managers treating these inconsistently?  And the answer to that—rather obvious in my view—is to avoid the unpleasantness of placing unwelcome assessments on the policymaker’s desk.So you’ve got those two broad areas—the public use and the possible impact on the intelligence community’s work itself.  And in the latter case, it’s always a matter of subtle, indirect influence, not a matter of blatant twisting of arms.ROSE:  So, if this process of politicization in various guises hadn’t occurred, the picture that the intelligence community would have presented would have differed how?  Perhaps it would look like Scandinavia, or what?PILLAR:  No, not at all.  With regard to the weapons of mass destruction issue, it—you know, I suspect we would not have had, you know, fundamental differences in the judgments.  You know, what we had was a, you know, widely shared—very widely shared—but, as it turned out, mistaken perception of the state of programs and stockpiles and so on.Some of these after-the-fact inquiries, such as that of the Senate Intelligence Committee, appropriately zeroed in on issues of wording and nuance and caveat and emphasis.  And that’s where I think the difference would have been—those subconscious or unconscious effects on those dozens of analysts writing those many different sentences and various assessments.  Things would have been trimmed and emphasized a little bit differently.But I’d hasten to add that on the two big issues on Iraq that were used by the administration, there’s a basic, fundamental difference between this one—the weapons of mass destruction issue—in which there was faulty intelligence analysis, insufficient collection in which we had a widely shared and, as it turned out, incorrect view, and then the issue of terrorism and alleged relationships or links with terrorist groups, and specifically al Qaeda, which, to put it quite bluntly, was a manufactured issue.  And there, there was nothing that was produced by the community in terms of its own assessments that judged any such relationship to anything close to an alliance or a patron-sponsor relationship.  Nonetheless, we’re well aware of how that issue was handled publicly and conveying the impression of an alliance, using raw bits of intelligence, which we then, you know, read in laundry lists in places like the Weekly Standard, as a basis for making that case.  That was one of the more obvious instances in which that kind of politicization took place.ROSE:  Albert Hirschman famously described the responses to organizations in decline or crisis as exit, voice or loyalty, arguing that people confronted with that kind of situation can leave, can try to change things from the inside, or can just keep quiet and go with the flow.  How did people respond to these pressures from above?  How did you respond to them?PILLAR:  The great majority of people who were wearing the badge respond when they come to work each day by trying to provide the best possible collection and analysis of intelligence that they can and being painfully aware of some of the constraints, which become particularly acute when they have to do something like present a paper face to face to a policymaker or testify before a congressional committee on the Hill, where they are very much aware of the fact that they are representing the executive branch, that there are serious constraints.  They would not treat things in the same way they would, undoubtedly, treat them if they were carrying before the same committee in a private capacity.A lot has been made, Gideon, of certain individual stories—people who depart and resign, you know, retire early.  I think a lot of that’s been overblown, quite frankly.  I mean, in my own case, I retired last year.  That’s exactly when I wanted to retire for 30 years.  As I was telling some people during the reception, I’m a professor who was locked inside a bureaucrat’s body and I’m glad to be out of it.  (Laughter.)  You know, every individual’s case is different.  There’s a different personal story.  There’s, you know, some of my colleagues who I think have had their names in the paper as, well, an early retirement, you know, forced out—something like this.  In any one instance, it might have been a case of, you know, the pros and cons between retiring now versus retiring later being almost in balance, and then one day, you know, there’s just enough to tip the balance where somebody goes home and tells his spouse, honey, now’s the time to do it; I’m going to retire.  And that’s, you know, that’s not really a new story.  It shouldn’t be, but a lot of news stories have been made out of this.ROSE:  Well, let me press you on this point.  Why didn’t you retire earlier?  Why was this article appearing in the March-April 2006 Foreign Affairs rather than the March-April 2003 Foreign Affairs?PILLAR:  My current job is as a political scientist and policy analyst.  Part of my job—my current one—is to write cogent essays on matters of public importance.  That’s what I tried to do in this instance.  My previous job before I retired last year was to provide the best possible intelligence analysis and to manage that analysis for whoever the policymaker is of the day.  I tried to do that job.  Sometimes we did it well, sometimes we didn’t.  But I was doing one job before, now I’m doing a different job.ROSE:  Okay.  So we have this article about a deluded leader living in a bubble, stumbling into war after being fed a steady diet of spin and lies by his sycophantic or ideologically extremist underlings.  (Laughter.)  Of course, I’m talking about the portrait of Saddam—(laughter)—in the May-June issue. PILLAR:  May-June issue—that’s—ROSE:  What’s kind of striking, though, is that it’s not—doesn’t seem to be all that far off, and what I find bizarre is that the penalties for dissent in the U.S. were substantially less than they were in Iraq.  (Laughter.)  There is a tidbit in the Saddam article about how a general who disagreed ended up sent in pieces to his wife later on and Shinseki retired.  And yet, it seems that the very modest pressures to not buck the trend, to continue to serve as a good soldier, to not incur the wrath of one’s superiors, or even, as you just said, to avoid the displeasure of putting on your boss’s desk something they didn’t want to see, was enough to, in some ways, pervert not just the intelligence community bureaucracy but the diplomatic bureaucracy—from the Gordon-Trainor book, the military bureaucracy comes off horribly. So are we learning here that you don’t need to be Saddam Hussein in order to get everybody beneath you to bend to your will.PILLAR:  I don’t think it’s that extreme, Gideon.  In fact, you know, myself and others did a number of things that, in retrospect, could be seen as taking risks, knowing full well that we would not be chopped up and delivered to our wives the next day.Let me just cite one example—and I continued to write in a private capacity on the outside while I was still wearing the government badge.  One point I’ve made when I’ve been asked about this about oh, why, you know, why didn’t you reveal this stuff earlier—as we’ve talked about—as revelations as subjects in my article in the journal.  In fact, there’s very little in that article that is a new revelation in the sense of something that hasn’t been reported, you know, in the media in one form or another before. And let me go beyond that and not just mention reporting of a fact, but giving my perspective—the whole issue of the, you know, alleged alliance with al Qaeda, and specifically, what did or did not Secretary Powell’s presentation at the United Nations in February of 2003 really demonstrate in that?  And one point I made briefly in the article was if you really go back over that transcript and read it very carefully, it doesn’t really say there’s any kind of assistance or cooperation or alliance, although clearly that was part of the impression that it was designed to create.Well, I wrote back in 2003 an additional introduction to my book on counterterrorism while I was still wearing the badge—and, of course, it had to go through all the approvals and everything for a current employee—in which I said exactly the same thing.  And I had some people read that and say my goodness, how did you get that approved?  Now, of course, you know, some introduction in the second edition of the book isn’t going to get the attention as a Foreign Affairs article will, but it was out there.  And if you wanted my take on that particular topic, you could have read this book, you know, two and a half years ago.ROSE:  Diverging for a second—I know people, including a lot of people in the agency, who think that that by itself is a problem and that Sharra’s book and that people shouldn’t be speaking out in public on matters relation to their professional capacities while their inside the intelligence services.PILLAR:  That’s right—well, yeah.  Well, Mike Sharra’s book was exceptional in that regard, which was, you know, a direct and very extended criticism of current policy.  And it’s hard to point to things that are anything comparable to that.  And there have been a lot of reactions procedurally in terms of how rules are interpreted as a result of Mike’s book.  You’re right, and I and others have, you know, gotten the criticism from both directions.  One direction—you know, why weren’t you saying this sort of stuff publicly earlier?  And the other direction, which I was getting at the time—why are you saying these things publicly?  I don’t know.  There’s a balance to be struck. I think it would be a grave mistake to have—wearing a government badge, being in the intelligence community or anywhere else—a prohibition against engaging in substantive discussion and debate in publication and speaking on the outside, because one of the things that would do, it would be a major disincentive for employment in our security services or government generally if people who, you know, are intellectually active, want to stay engaged are told no, you just can’t do that sort of thing.  You can’t give talks like this or the kind of talk I gave that was off the record that Bob Novak made a column out of.  You can’t talk to a class.  You can’t do this.  You know, if those sorts of restrictions had been placed on me, I think I would have left the service much earlier.ROSE:  Let’s turn to some substantive matters for a second.  You write that there was a strong consensus among serious observers before the war that containment was working and that Saddam was still in a box.  I remember actually saying—we (on over?) in the final version were saying gee, was that—would I really go along with that plea?  Do you stand by that?  It seems to me that there were a lot of people before the war and the Ken Pollack’s of the world and—(inaudible)—saying gee, containment is breaking down and having legitimate worry.PILLAR:  I think your extended piece in the new issue of the journal from Joint Forces Command history does a lot to support that in terms of how the sanctions eroded greatly, or contributed to the erosion, as well as all their own procedures to the Iraqi military capacity. That said, there certainly was the very legitimate argument along two grounds.  One, sanctions themselves were eroding in the sense that we had sanctions fatigue, and the Europeans and others were making it clear that there were limits.  Secondly, there was the point on the military side that Operation Southern Watch and the other efforts to enforce the no-fly zones and so on, which entailed a substantial military presence in Saudi Arabia, was itself a liability. Now, one immediately has to respond to that—well, which is the greater negative in terms of impact on U.S. perception in the Middle East?  Is it the troop presence in Saudi Arabia or is it actually fighting a war with a lot of casualties in Iraq?  I mean, you can argue that one out.But yes, there are legitimate—there was a legitimate case to be made.  I personally think it was outweighed by the opposite case, but it was legitimate.ROSE:  You mentioned the second edition of your book on terrorism.  I remember reading the first edition carefully thinking it was the best thing written on the subject at the time—and nonetheless, quite surprised when planes struck the World Trade Center not too long afterwards and by 19 hijackers ordered by a guy in a cave in Afghanistan.  Is the lesson of 9/11 and the lesson of the Iraqi WMD the same, which is we don’t know what’s going on, either what’s coming or what’s not coming, and that no matter what we do, we get screwed?PILLAR:  Well, in terms of 9/11 and being surprised, it’s the tactical surprise, and that’s a fact of life with regard to international terrorism.  It wasn’t a strategic surprise, you know.  And you can go—you can look at my book, which was mainly about counterterrorism, but you can look in a whole lot of other things.  You know, the strategic appreciation of the threat from jihadist terrorism and al Qaeda in particular was profound.  It motivated extensive efforts by the United States government through most of the Clinton administration and leading into the first few months of the Bush administration.  I’ve had people, for example, read Steve Coll’s Pulitzer Prize winning book “Ghost Wars” and react to it by commenting to me, my goodness, I didn’t know all that stuff was going on—that stuff being, extensive over several years, diplomatic, military, intelligence and other efforts to go after this particular leader and this particular group.One of the myths that’s been unfortunately accentuated by the 9/11 commission—because they set as part of their agenda—as their agenda getting public support for their particular plan for intelligence community reorganization—was the myth that there was a strategic lack of awareness of this threat.  That’s simply not true.  And if there were still more things that weren’t done—and a couple of things that come to mind are, number one, very extensive and expensive security countermeasures of the sort that we did enact after 9/11—you know, Department of Homeland Security and all the rest.  Or number two, doing something like Operation Enduring Freedom, the military intervention in Afghanistan, before 9/11.  There were very good reasons we didn’t do that.  I mean, the main reason we didn’t do the second was that there were important other policy considerations—foreign policy considerations—involving South Asia, involving Pakistan, involving Afghanistan, the policymakers being worried about, you know, the Pakistani nuclear equation vis-a-vis India and all those sorts of things. And as to why not, you know, extensive new, major, counterterrorist security measures, it’s been a fact of life for decades in this republic that we as a people do not do expensive, risky things just based on warning.  We do them after a disaster has occurred.  And I think that the outstanding recent example is Hurricane Katrina and the failure to protect New Orleans from a much-predicted—much-predicted—hurricane-induced flood.  Before it happens, pennies are pinched, the Corps of Engineers’ budget is being cut.  After it happens, $60 billion appropriated at the flick of a gavel.  This was just another example of that.ROSE:  Oh, but of course, the Bush administration’s preemption policy was a direct response to that.  And yet, in the Iraq case, it seems to have had its own comeuppance. So to what extent is the—do I sense that the lessons of Iraq contradict the lessons of 9/11 and vice versa?PILLAR:  I don’t see it in those sort of contradictory terms.  The idea of preemption, in my personal view, is not a universally workable solution to apply to the international terrorist threat, particularly as it relates to the way that threat has evolved to one of more groups than of states.  There was a lot of effort to try to preempt the group.  And we talk about renditions and going after the infrastructure and going after finances.  Extensive efforts were being made on that back in the 1990s.  Some of them have become more effective since 9/11 because our officials can go and pound on the tables of their foreign counterparts and say we mean it this time.  Yes, we want you to freeze those funds and the American people are really upset about it now, which is what they couldn’t say in 1997 or ‘98 or ‘99.  So I don’t see that as a sort of direct contradiction.  It’s really nonparallel issues.ROSE:  I’m going to turn it over to our audience in one second.  Let me just ask one last question. You have spent the better part of your career inside the system dealing with incredibly classified intelligence obtained through various secret methods.  The vast majority of the members of the Council on Foreign Relations have to—and the public at large, need I say—have to form their opinions and choices about foreign policy and political matters without the benefit of that.  How different does the world look when you have to rely only on open source intelligence from the way the world looks when you’re dealing every day with the secret stream of stuff that comes in from all our various methods?PILLAR:  Well, most things on most of the important aspects that figure in the policy debates, it doesn’t look that much different at all.  And just to take the example of Iraq and before the decisions or before we actually went to war, the assessments that I referenced in the article about likely postwar challenges, almost none of that—almost none—was based on, you know, secret information.  It was a matter of assessment based on the expertise of experts we could consult with which, in turn, was based on history, culture, geopolitical facts that really are all open source.  There’s not a matter of secrets there.That said, I think your question, Gideon, is a useful hook on which to issue the reminder of when we look at other issues like Iran, like North Korea—we have this very salient issue of the Iranian nuclear program that’s troubling us now—we have to remind ourselves just what we don’t know—what we don’t know.  The we—I mean not just the public, not just members of the Council on Foreign Relations, but everybody, including the ones reading the cables at Langley. I noticed that Ambassador Negroponte had some testimony on the Hill a couple of weeks ago—the annual worldwide threat testimony—in which he made a statement that got some press attention about North Korea.  Now, we’ve had this widespread presumption that North Korea probably already has some bombs in the basement.  And Mr. Negroponte said well, we don’t know that; we don’t know whether they have nuclear weapons.  And I had a journalist call me up and ask, why would he say that?  You know, why would the DNI say publicly we don’t know that?  I said I think he said it because it’s true.  We don’t know that.  You know, there are sound bases for making the analytic judgment based on how many reactors they’ve had going and how much plutonium they could have produced and so on, that they probably have enough fissile material for several weapons, but we don’t know that. And in the case of Iran, the public debate—much of it—seems to have taken it as an article of faith and taken it for granted that this country, this regime, is definitely pursuing nuclear weapons.  My own personal assessment is that that is their current course—current course.  But again, we don’t know that.  There isn’t some secret out there.  There isn’t some report out there, that I’m aware of, that closes that issue, that says for sure that that’s the case.  So yeah, there’s a lot of ignorance there, but don’t—maybe it’s in one sense a bright note and in another sense a gloomy note.  But those of you who don’t read the secret cables really aren’t that far behind, you know, on most of the important issues of foreign policy, those who do.ROSE:  Okay.  With that, let’s turn it over to the audience.  Let me just remind you to wait for the microphone and speak directly into it, to stand, state your name and affiliation, and limit yourself to one question, and keep it concise so that we can get as many in as possible.Yes, over here.QUESTIONER:  Gary Sick, Columbia University.  I first of all want to say that the professionals that I talk to all say that you are the professional’s professional and that they really do respect what you say and where you come from, and that means a lot to me.I had the opportunity to talk to a group of CIA analysts recently at a retreat sort of operation and I was struck by the fact that the question that I kept getting from the floor, from these people who were senior analysts with the CIA, were how do you deliver bad news to the boss?  How do you tell him that what he thinks or what he wants to think isn’t really true?  And I tried to answer that question, but I wonder what your answer is to that question.PILLAR:  Well, Gary, there are many, you know, courses that try to find a way to work around exactly that sort of dilemma.  One of the first things that come to mind is—and I’ve had many policymakers, you know, react to intelligence assessments, including ones that aren’t very optimistic, by saying you aren’t showing us the opportunities.  You’re just showing us the problems.  Show us the opportunities.  Now, that’s a very legitimate demand to make, a very legitimate question to make.  And good intelligence analysis ought to not have to wait for that demand to be made, but to, you know, work it in to the assessment.So even the gloomiest, least welcome kind of analysis always ought to be—this is what ought to go through analysts’ mind—ought to be coupled with all right, so it’s a bad situation.  So what can we do to help make sense of it, at least to show the opportunities for making it less bad?  And that’s the main thing that comes to mind as something that—the community by and large tries to do this—sometimes not always successfully, as is indicated by the fact that policymakers do come back with the oh, you just gave me the bad news; you didn’t give me the opportunities.  That’s the main thing to do.QUESTIONER:  But doesn’t that shade over to being policy prescriptive if you’re trying to point the—PILLAR:  Yes, it comes very close to it.  And actually, the people who get most nervous about the policy prescriptiveness of things or coming close to that line are the intelligence officers.  And in discussions in Washington—particularly not so much the papers, but the face-to-face meetings—usually the policy types are much more relaxed about, you know, seeing the intel types just participate fully in the debate and discussion and not try to draw some line—well, I’m the intelligence person, so I’m going to make this assessment, but I’m not going to go beyond that.It is still incumbent on the intelligence types to recognize and observe that line, even if there are attempts on the other side of the table to draw them in.  But yes, that’s always a fine line that’s being walked.  You’re right.ROSE:  Over here.QUESTIONER:  Maurice Tempelsman, Leon Tempelsman & Son.  Thank you very much for a very enlightening presentation. Let me approach my question from a perspective of methodology.  The facts are not looked at deus ex machina.  You can look at them through a perspective of capability.  You can look at it through a perspective of intention.  But there’s a third dimension, which is context and the judgment of how much context affects precisely the subjectivity that is inherent in your statement of politicization.And let’s step back from the current even to the Cold War and taking a look at heavy investment in intelligence during the Cold War over many years, the conclusions that were drawn at the time, ranging all the way from the missile gap and Adlai Stevenson’s presentations to the U.N.What lessons can we draw with the distance of history and the advantage of a situation, which is closer to having played out, and therefore, we can analyze better?  What lessons can we draw in order to particularly evaluate the effect of context on how information is judged and how that is taken into the decision-making process?PILLAR:  I think it takes a whole course to really answer your question, and I’ll try to answer it this way.  We—the collective we, whether it’s an intelligence officer or the public that is looking critically at assertions or statements based on intelligence—we need to remind ourselves that the zeitgeist, the context of the moment, does change.  And you know, I’ve written about this one very intense, very salient, very recent and very important issue.  And in my professional experience, going back over the last three decades, I haven’t seen anything quite like this.  There are a couple of things that start to come close to it. Nonetheless—I think this is what your question is implying, and I agree with the implication that we always need to be aware that even though we somehow think we’ve overcome whatever it was—the bias or the zeitgeist—that’s afflicted us most recently, there’s going to be another one around the corner, and we’re going to be wading deeply into it before we realize that we’ve waded into it. So in the Iraq case, for example, even if there is a great increase in skepticism about things like preemptive attacks and weapons of mass destruction by rogue states and everything, even if whatever biases or blinders we might have had on that set of issues is somehow corrected or balanced—I’m not suggesting we’re going to be able to succeed in doing that—there’s going to be some other issue entirely different that will be a subject of headlines, say, five years from now.  And it will be the subject of intelligence officers trying to write assessments that are going to become controversial.  We can’t even predict now, but we’re going to have to remember before that whatever that debate on whatever that subject, this is going to come up, that there’s going to be some kind of zeitgeist.  There’s going to be some kind of context that’s going to have its own biases and its own pressures on people like intelligence officers, and we’re going to try to recognize it as early as we can.  That’s the only way I can respond.QUESTIONER:  (Off mike)—and former head of the Congressional Research Service, Foreign and Defense Policy Division.There’s been a great deal of attention and focusing on the intelligence policymaking relationship on the question of whether the policymakers influenced or shaped the kinds of judgments that the intelligence community came out with, and you’ve addressed that, I think, with great sensitivity.But it was almost my understanding that once the intelligence community came out with its majority judgments, it was the responsibility of the policymakers to then challenge that from left, right and center, and not to just say oh, we now have an intelligence judgment that allows us to take a prescribed set of policies.In your experience, are there cases where the policymakers have seriously challenged the intelligence judgment to come out with a more sophisticated understanding and a better sense of what policy should be, had they not seriously challenged the intelligence community judgments?PILLAR:  They should challenge.  And I think the general answer is yes, there have been instances, but it’s hard to point to any one that’s a net-plus because all of the challenges that come to mind—not just in this recent past with the issue we’ve been dealing with, but others in my experience—have been always challenges in one direction.  You know, it’s sort of like the statisticians talking about one-tailed versus two-tailed tests.  And quite frankly, some of the things that have been described as policymaker challenges to the intelligence have not been that at all, but if anything, have been the other way around. I’ll get very specific here—Mr. Bolton on some of his issues of concern regarding Cuba and regarding Syria.  Some of what he did—and of course, this came up when his nomination was in question for U.N. ambassador.  Some of what he did was defended on grounds that well, he was just challenging what the intelligence officers were saying.  No, it’s the exact opposite.  He came up with a judgment, tried to get the community to sign onto it and wouldn’t countenance being challenged by intelligence officers who said wait a minute, the intelligence doesn’t go that far.  And so the response according to reports—I wasn’t a fly on the wall in this case—was, number one, to respond with an angry fit; and number two, when that didn’t work, to go to the person’s boss and try to get him or her removed from their job. That is one of the rare, rare instances of what I would describe as blatant attempts at politicization.  My point that I made in response to getting this first question, you recall, was that politicization, when it does occur, is almost never in response to that sort of thing.  At a minimum, you’ll get intelligence officers’ dander up.But I have a hard time thinking of any one instance in which there was a, you know, very beneficial, balanced, you know, two-tailed test challenged in both directions where the attitude is—this would be wonderful if this is the policymaker response—I’m totally open, you know; I don’t have a policy direction here.  I don’t want to be wrong in this direction and I don’t want to be wrong in that direction, so let me challenge you on both.  That would be the best possible thing.  I can’t think of any one instance when that’s happened.  It’s always a challenge in one direction.  And sometimes—sometimes—that helps—and you know, some of the Team B stuff on strategic forces and so on.I think, in retrospect, one can say, on balance, some of that kind of challenge, even though it was in one direction, was probably—brought us collectively closer to a more accurate perception.  So you know, I’d name an example like that.  But the best instance is if it’s challenge based on total openness, challenge in both directions.  And I can’t think of any instance of that.ROSE:  Right here in front.QUESTIONER:  Mr. Pillar, my name is Roland Paul.  I’m a lawyer.  I’ve been in the government a couple of times, which included a couple of excursions over to Langley.Your article is very good analysis of the intelligence process.  It’s become—it’s kind of a pitch—been characterized, as Gideon—you know, that the war was a mistake.  And you’ve had some very good, profound analysis—policy analysis evidence in some of your remarks today.So my question is going to be, what is your bottom line about the war, and just why?  And let me just give you three reference points that you can take.  David Kay is on the record several times saying he thought the war was a good idea mainly because he feared the scientists were going to get the WMD or sell the WMD to the terrorists.  Secretary Rumsfeld in this room when I asked him after the war, long after the war, what was your reason, he said because we were afraid that WMD—that Saddam would get WMD or he would give it to the terrorists.  And the third one is President Bush in his interview with Bob Woodward when Woodward said there were no WMDs; Bush says well, but he would have gotten it quickly and that was good enough for me.What is your view on the war?PILLAR:  Well, I’ll answer that in two parts.  One, if you want my bottom line right up front, I believe the war was a mistake.  And I answer that mainly from the standpoint of an old counterterrorist officer who considers international terrorism, you know, one of my main concerns.  There was absolutely no question in my mind that, on balance, the impact of this effort on the danger of international terrorism, killing more Americans, has made it worse.  Iraq is the newest and most salient jihad of the radical Islamists.  It’s serving some of the same function that Afghanistan served before as a training ground, as an inspiration, as a networking opportunity.   And on top of that, since it’s we rather than the Soviets who are the invaders, there’s a huge propaganda bonus for the extremists.  We can see it in the polls.  We can see it in a lot of other things.  It has made things worse with regard to countering terrorism.The second part of my response to your question, though—and this gets back to some of the things—the way I think the argument I make in the article, I hope, is treated—there were legitimate grounds for arguing for Operation Iraqi Freedom—totally different grounds—not the WMD stuff and certainly not the terrorist stuff.  As I say, the business about al Qaeda linkages was basically a manufactured issue, and I commend to you Peter Bergen’s op-ed in The New York Times the other day in terms of, you know, how this issue has popped up again a little bit.  I think Peter batted it down quite effectively.Some people who have commended what I wrote—mostly old friends and colleagues in the intelligence community—think I was too kind to the administration in imputing as their major motive for this operation the desire to shake up the sclerotic politics of the Middle East and try to use it as a catalyst for democratization.  Some people say oh, you should talk about Israel and oil and Halliburton and all kinds of other motives like that.  And I’m not denying that some of these other things were factors.  But I think, you know, most of what we’ve been hearing more recently from the administration about democratic change was all along the main motivation.  And there was a legitimate argument to be made along those lines. I happen to believe that the administration is right that there does need to be change in that region, that the closed political and economic systems do have a lot to do with extremists and terrorist threats against the United States.  And the administration has done some effective things and continues to do it on other grounds—not the Iraq war, but things like the Middle East Partnership Initiative and other things designed over the long term to try to lay the basis for a more open, more democratic, more liberal set of societies in the Middle East.Now, one could have argued that—and some people whom I respect, who aren’t part of the administration, but who know an awful lot about the Middle East, were on balance in favor of the war because for precisely that reason:  that this roll of the dice, known as Operation Iraqi Freedom, was worth the risk in order to bring about this—try to bring about this needed shaking up of the Middle East.  There will be an alternative view with which I would identify myself, that even though you need the change and even though you can do these other things—like these other programs I mentioned, and they’re important—that this particular effort to use military force as a kind of catalyst was more likely to backfire.  We needed—we, the country—needed a debate between those opposing points of view.  And there were other relevant points of view that could have been and should have been part of that debate, including the viewpoint that we don’t really need to care about, you know, the internal structures in the Middle East.  That’s another argument; I happen to disagree with it.But we never had that debate.  Instead, we’ve spent all our time and effort talking about things like aluminum tubes and did Mohamed Atta have a meeting in Prague.  And I don’t think those were the most important things that needed to be debated in deciding whether or not this particular expedition was on balance and worthwhile.ROSE:  Did I hear you correctly?  Did you just say that some of your old colleagues in the intelligence community thought that Israel, Halliburton and oil were important reasons why we went to war?PILLAR:  No, I shouldn’t have identified that just with old colleagues in the intelligence community.  I mean, of course, there’s the—I think the now well-known piece by Walt and Mearsheimer on the Israel angle.  Oil and—you know, of course, oil’s a factor.  Some of you may have seen Ted Koppel’s piece a month or so ago on that in which he said, you know, we shouldn’t be ashamed of that.  I agree with that.  I have hesitated to say oil as a motive because that immediately gets in the shortened version of remarks or an article, that it becomes translated into the simplistic, Muslim-in-street view, oh, they conquered Iraq to control oil. No, I don’t think that was the case at all.  It figured in different ways.  One, Iraq’s oil wealth is one of the reasons it’s very important and why, if you were hoping to pick one place to be a catalyst to shake up the rest of the region, that’s one of the reasons, because it’s important for that reason.  And the other way it worked in is that some of the pro-war elements—and I think Mr. Wolfowitz, for one, was very explicit about this—had the belief that because of Iraq’s oil wealth, we would not have to worry about a costly reconstruction because it would pay for itself.  Well, of course, it hasn’t worked out that way.  But it’s not a matter of well, we just conquered this country to control the oil resources.  I never believed that for a moment.ROSE:  Ted Sorensen.QUESTIONER:  Thanks very much for a very good presentation.  Your last answer convinces me I should ask the question I’ve been trying to ask all along.Regardless of (fables ?) like policymaker, were any of those who politicized the intelligence through distortion, arbitrary selection and so on officially inside the intelligence community?PILLAR:  I have suggested—although I identified this as one that is less obvious in the public use and, you know, in the non-use of intelligence in decision-making—that yes, I believe in the subtle ways I described earlier in response to a previous question there was what I would describe as politicization.  It’s not necessarily even conscious.  It’s not inspired by a political or policy preference.  It’s more of a response to an atmosphere, a pressure, a zeitgeist, the sorts of things we talked about before, but the intelligence community is not blameless. I don’t want to—if you’re trying to get at, you know, particular individuals or particular officials, I just don’t want to do that because I don’t think it’s mainly a problem of that.  It’s mainly a matter of structure, atmosphere and how this particular issue played out as it was used by this particular administration.If all of us in the community were men and women of perfect courage as well as insight, the intelligence community would have said different things and would have made different judgments, at least in the way that I’ve suggested earlier.ROSE:  Over here.  No, you first, and then Gary.QUESTIONER:  My name in James Tunkey and I’m with a company called Eye on Asia. I’d like to pick up on Ted’s point but perhaps go at it from a different angle.  Leadership is very important.  What leadership qualities should the American people be demanding of their intelligence leaders?PILLAR:  I think the main qualities are those that we’d demand in any other highly responsible position of public service.  It’s not unique to intelligence.  It’s a matter of integrity, knowledge, commitment, all those sorts of things.In terms of what might be different with regard to the intelligence community leadership, hard to separate it, you know, separate the qualities of the leaders from the structure and the atmosphere in which they have to operate.  I mean, I’ve made some suggestions in my piece about perhaps redoing the structure a bit while stopping short of recommending any new reorganization next week in a way that, you know—a man or a woman of intelligence, character and integrity and all those other qualities that we would value—say in any Cabinet secretary—would function very effectively as leader of our community.One of the, you know, best-remembered directors of Central Intelligence is George H.W. Bush.  He only served for a year back in 1976 toward the end of the Ford administration.  But that center out there in Langley is named after him and that reflects a lot of sentiment among those who had some experience with the elder Mr. Bush as director of the very high respect he earned in just that one year.  And he was a politician.  He was a political figure.  Some people have criticized the issue of, you know, the appointment of Mr. Goss, the current director of CIA.  Well, this is an elected politician, a Republican—you know, all this.  I think Mr. Goss does not deserve some of the bad press that he’s gotten.  And indeed, there are some respects in which an elected politician, be he a Republican or a Democrat, has insights into certain things that people like myself who have been career, you know, analysts or bureaucrats don’t have—trying to make sense, for example, of this political morass in Iraq and going back over these last couple of elections for the constituent assembly and the later legislature. I was in the little bit of time that—I sort of overlapped.  I say sort of because I was really working for the National Intelligence Council and not really part of the CIA, but was in, you know, some briefings.  I was quite impressed with Mr. Goss, as someone who has stood for office himself—his understanding of and insight into some of the questions that were related to elections and that part of the political process, which your typical analyst is just not going to have the experience to relate to.ROSE:  Let me (think about that ?). We have a question from a national member, William Lockhauser (ph) from Reston, Virginia, who asks, how accurate do you think the assessment—how accurate is the intelligence coming from Iraq being currently presented to the president? And what I would say in that regard—we had a session here the other day with the council fellow, Vali Nasr, and one of the things he was saying was that there were some taboo subjects.  Used to be you couldn’t talk about the insurgency—they didn’t want to hear.  Then you couldn’t talk about communal conflict—didn’t want to hear it in the military.  And now he was saying there’s some things like foreign aid to various forces—talking about Jordan and Saudi Arabia and helping the Sunnis—that people don’t want to hear about it.Do you think the policy—and so, therefore, were not getting reported back up the chain.  Do you think that there are—is an accurate picture of what’s going on in Iraq being presented to senior policymakers today?PILLAR:  Well, greetings to Reston, first of all.  I wasn’t aware, you know, when I was still wearing the badge, and I don’t perceive now, that sort of thing.  I simply don’t.  There are issues that arise in terms of what kind of terminology to use publicly and what things are emphasized publicly with regard to well, is it the Syrians and Iranians causing all this mess or is it more home grown?  But in terms of what is being reported inside, I’m not aware of any, you know, curtailment of information.  What happens when something, you know, makes it as far as the White House, and you know, what happens inside there I just don’t know.  But in terms of things coming out of the field and things coming out of the intelligence community, I don’t think that’s a problem.ROSE:  Do you think an accurate picture is being given to the people back home?PILLAR:  I think so, yes.  And I would note—you know, I give General Abizaid a lot of credit.  He’s the one who very early on, you know, used the term insurgency—you know, well before many others, you know, felt comfortable using that term.  And I think he was right to do that.ROSE:  Gary Rosen.QUESTIONER:  I’m Gary Rosen from Commentary Magazine. I wanted to press you a little bit more on what you understand the motives of the administration to have been in going to war.  I was struck in the article early on.  You say explicitly that intelligence on Iraqi weapons programs did not drive its decision to go to war, yet you go on to say that there was this wide consensus in the United States and abroad that sanctions were working and that we had Saddam in a box. To my mind, thinking back on that moment, there were lots of people outside of the administration—people in the journalistic community, who by no means are thought of as neoconservatives—Bill Keller, David Remnick, Ken Pollack—coming from a background like yours—Fareed Zakaria—who thought that sanctions were in fact not working.  So lots of people across the spectrum.  But then you go on to say that the administration arrived at so different a policy solution—that is, rejected sanction—shows that the decision to topple Saddam was driven by other factors—namely, the notion of spreading democracy and liberalization of the Middle East.How are you certain of that?  How do you know what their real motives were?PILLAR:  I don’t know any more than I know what the motives of the mullahs in Tehran are about whether they’re seeking nuclear weapons.  I don’t think I said there was a consensus, you know, against the war.  I think I said, you know, there were a lot of people who believed that.  You cited some of the distribution opinion in the United States.  I think if you broaden that to outside the United States and look at our European allies where the same perceptions about the weapons program were very widely shared but the policy consensus—and there, I think, you could call it a consensus—was very different and very much opposed. So, you know, if you look at that whole, broad spectrum inside and outside the U.S. of policy preferences on the war and try to correlate that—because it doesn’t correlate very well—with the even more broadly held, mistaken perception about the weapons, it clearly wasn’t the main reason.  Because people who shared the perception had very different policy preferences.  Was it an important, you know, part of the case?  Of course it was.  It was an essential part of the case.  But in terms of what drove it—you know, if we were to expand on this topic—I were to expand, and I’d go back to, you know, 1991, the whole sense of unfinished business, not overthrowing Saddam then, there is a neoconservative literature out there where I think you can trace this concern about Iraq that goes far beyond the WMD issue.ROSE:  Just two more questions because we’re running out of time. Here in the front.QUESTIONER:  Thank you.  John Temple Swing. I was fascinated by the news reporting on your article, which I heard a good deal about in public radio and other sources before I actually read your article.  And most of the sense I got from reading all the news reports was that your article more or less proved conclusively, or at lest convincingly, that the administration did not base its reason for going to war on the intelligence it was getting from the intelligence community, and that in a very large sense, therefore, it was irrelevant.  I did not read that or find that in your actual article, and I haven’t heard that really here tonight. So was the initial reporting on your article wrong?PILLAR:  No, it’s not.  Read the article again.  (Laughter.)  And I’ll just recap a couple of things.  There was a point that was just raised by Mr. Rosen with regard to how the whole WMD issue did or did not figure into it.  On the other big, you know, public selling issue—the supposed, you know, alliance with Saddam—the intelligence community was not saying that at all.  In fact, they were saying something much different.  There was not an alliance.  It was, at most, you know, two very different parties that are opposed in many ways that were kind of keeping track of each other.  They had a couple of contacts years ago in Sudan and that was it.  So the public line was diametrically opposed. There’s the issue of all right, even though we all seem to agree he’s got a weapons program, how long is it going to be before he gets them?  Even the badly flawed, infamous national intelligence estimate on the subject said he’s probably still several years away from getting it—not urgent.  We had the vice president say I think he’s real close to getting them and it is urgent.  And then there’s whole issue of what kind of challenges are we going to have to deal with after we invade? And part of, you know, the first section of the article was the assessments being offered was we’re going to have a mess.  It’s going to be long, difficult, turbulent.  We’re going to have these different ethnic and sectarian communities at their throats.  We’re going to have a civil war if we’re not going to sit on top of it.  No evidence that that really was cranked into the decision at all.  So I think there’s ample evidence that no, this decision did not rest on what the intelligence community offered.ROSE:  Did you think that at any point anybody in senior positions in the administration believed that Iraq was connected to 9/11?PILLAR:  I think there is some evidence with one or two people.  Mr. Wolfowitz seems to be one, from one or two quotes that I’ve seen.  I hope that didn’t last very long, but I can’t rule it out.  At lest a couple of people for at least a while believed that, yes.ROSE:  Last question over here—unfortunately.QUESTIONER:  I’m David Robinson.  A technical question:  The change that’s come about—I’m a physicist.  If you look at the NIE, you see when there was an expert on atomic energy, he said aluminum tubes were not for centrifuges.  When you had an Air Force person looking at airplanes, he said those airplanes are not useful for us to spread germ warfare.  I don’t know if there was anybody there who knew about biological warfare, but anybody who said that it’s good to have mobile labs making biological weapons where you need extra pressure—internal pressure—and a lot of safety would say that’s a stupid way to do it.  These dissenting voices at least (enter into it ?).  Now with the new and then—nonetheless, the consensus was opposed to that.  And the same person who said—Air Force—the planes weren’t right would say that the tubes were okay because he was an Air Force guy.Is there a—with the new changes, do you think these dissenting voices could make it into an intelligence estimate?PILLAR:  They do—they did make it in.QUESTIONER:  No, I was talking about with the centralization, which came afterwards.  Do you think they could still get that kind of information?PILLAR:  Oh, yes.  That has no affect on it whatsoever.  You mean the December ‘04 intelligence reorganization?  Has no affect on it whatsoever.  You’re still going to have—if particular agencies have dissents on views in community documents, including national intelligence estimates, they will be there.I’ll make this my closing point.  We had all that discussion and debate about that reorganization, that the scheme the 9/11 commission came up with didn’t address this set of issues at all—did not address it at all.  I don’t think it makes it any worse, but it doesn’t make it any better. Basically, the DNI—Ambassador Negroponte is in the same position vis-a-vis the White House and the policymakers that a DCI like George Tenet was.  There are a lot of other flaws that we don’t have time to go into now, in my view, with regard to—not a lot, but some other flaws—with regard to the reorganization.  I think the Congress will have to readdress it.  I was on the Hill just yesterday talking to some House members making this point.  I don’t know if they’ll readdress it next year or three years from now or five years from now, but my message to them was whenever you do readdress it—and some of these flaws have to do with things like ambiguity in the DNI’s authority—whenever you do readdress it, address this set of issues, too.  You didn’t last time.ROSE:  With that, Paul, we could talk about this for a very long time.  Unfortunately, one of the council’s most hallowed traditions is letting everybody get out of here at the right time.  So with that, we’re going to close it up.  Thank you very much.  (Applause.)(C) COPYRIGHT 2006, FEDERAL NEWS SERVICE, INC., 1000 VERMONT AVE.NW; 5TH FLOOR; WASHINGTON, DC - 20005, USA.  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.  ANY REPRODUCTION, REDISTRIBUTION OR RETRANSMISSION IS EXPRESSLY PROHIBITED.UNAUTHORIZED REPRODUCTION, REDISTRIBUTION OR RETRANSMISSION CONSTITUTES A MISAPPROPRIATION UNDER APPLICABLE UNFAIR COMPETITION LAW, AND FEDERAL NEWS SERVICE, INC. RESERVES THE RIGHT TO PURSUE ALL REMEDIES AVAILABLE TO IT IN RESPECT TO SUCH MISAPPROPRIATION.FEDERAL NEWS SERVICE, INC. IS A PRIVATE FIRM AND IS NOT AFFILIATED WITH THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.  NO COPYRIGHT IS CLAIMED AS TO ANY PART OF THE ORIGINAL WORK PREPARED BY A UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT OFFICER OR EMPLOYEE AS PART OF THAT PERSON’S OFFICIAL DUTIES.FOR INFORMATION ON SUBSCRIBING TO FNS, PLEASE CALL JACK GRAEME AT 202-347-1400.THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT.
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    The Fog of Law The Need for a Legal Framework for 21st Century Security Policy
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    U.S. Intelligence: The Inside Story
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    Council on Foreign Relations New York, NYDANA PRIEST: Okay. I think we're going to start now, so if everyone could take their seats and turn off your cell phones and BlackBerries and other monitoring devices that you might have, because our guest is Jim Risen. This is on the record, and I'm going to introduce Jim and then talk with him for a little while and then turn it over to questions.Jim Risen is one of my competitors -- I'm with The Washington Post, he's with The New York Times -- and he's renowned among reporters as being never among reporters. (Chuckles.) Whenever there are news conferences or big events that reporters who cover national security -- Jim is always working in the background somewhere, which always bothers us, because we can't keep track of him. (Chuckles.) And so you can see the fruits of that in his book.He's currently the -- a national security correspondent with The New York Times. And he was a member of the team that won the Pulitzer in 2002 for the coverage of September 11th and terrorism. He's the author the book that we will be discussing tonight, "State of War: The Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration." But this is not his first book. He co-authored "Wrath of Angels" and "The Main Enemy: The Inside Story of the CIA's Final Showdown with the KGB."He began his intel career about 10 years ago, when at the LA Times, as an economic correspondent, he was getting awfully bored, looking for something else to do. And they said, "Well, you can cover intelligence sort of on the side and also the State Department on the side." And between the State Department and the CIA, the CIA won out -- (chuckles) -- no big surprise. And that's how he started his career at the LA Times and from there jumped to The New York Times after, I will note, The Washington Post tried to hire him first -- (chuckles) -- and that didn't work.So I wanted to begin, before we get into the substance of the book, just to talk with you a little bit about even why you decided to write a book, given how much you were writing for The New York Times. And why did you find a need to go deeper and do something in book form?JAMES RISEN: Well, you know, both of us were covering this stuff after 9/11 -- by the way, I just want you all to know what a fantastic competitor Dana is. And she scares the hell out of everybody at The New York Times with her stories.I just felt after 9/11 we were covering everything so fast, and there was so much happening; I felt like this was the first time in my career as a reporter when you really felt like you were really part of history in a very immediate sense that I'd never felt before as a reporter. And I felt that we were just skimming the service, as the whole news business, and I just had this constant feeling that I was drinking from a fire hydrant trying to write about this stuff.And after a couple of years of just running, as we all were, flat out, I just realized there was way -- there was so much happening that we didn't understand that I felt like I really had to step back and try and understand what was happening, especially after the war in Iraq. Iraq really, I think, changed the whole dynamic of how Washington is working, because there was a great -- not complete, but there was a lot of consensus in the government and in Washington in general, the political establishment, about Afghanistan and the about the early days of the war on terror, but I think Iraq broke that consensus eventually. And we began to hear from people in the intelligence community and throughout the Bush administration in 2003, 2004 and then last year this growing frustration and anger and dismay at what was happening in the government. And I felt like it was very hard to reflect in daily journalism. It was something that I felt I could try to do better in a book.PRIEST: So everyone expects a book -- and yours definitely fulfills this -- to go deeper and explain behind the scenes, behind the headlines. But trying to do that, especially in intelligence, can be very difficult, because superficial reporting is easier in a difficult situations. Did you find people more willing to talk to you because you were writing a book; things wouldn't come out right away, or --RISEN: Some, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, I mean, that was interesting, because I think there were people -- definitely people who were willing to talk about certain things that had happened a couple of years ago that didn't want to see them come out right away. And I'm sure that's happened with a lot of book authors. I've heard that from other authors, that that has been the case. And I know that was the case in some of these things that -- they felt -- there's a slight different kind of a relationship you develop with people when you're working on a book, because you can take more time developing a relationship, because it's not -- you don't have to turn it around fast.PRIEST: So if you were to talk about the motives, as best you can determine, of people who -- you know, obviously they're often talking to you about things they aren't supposed to talk to you about; it's probably illegal for them to talk to you about, in some cases. What are the range of motives that you found for sources who nonetheless want to help you out?RISEN: I could ask you exactly the same question.PRIEST: Well, I'm the presider, so -- (chuckles) -- RISEN: You know, it's the same thing that any reporter covering this stuff goes through, which is it varies from person to person. And a big part of the job that you have is to kind of vet your source, before you even go further with that person, to figure out what kind of person they are. First, you want to know, are they who they say they are? Did they really have the access, if they act like they had the access to the information? Are they credible, you know? And then the big question is, what is their motivation beyond, you know, are they credible?And I found -- it varied. In the case of the NSA story, I think it was a genuine belief that the Bush administration was doing something illegal and that they did not want to be a part of something that was potentially unconstitutional, and they felt that this was important for the people to know about. Other things -- other people I talked to were just -- were deeply angered by the way -- the conduct of the administration on the war in Iraq and the lack of planning; the whole issue of WMD; a whole range of motions. But on the NSA one, it was truly the clearest case of pure whistle-blowing I've ever seen in my career as a journalist. People who truly believed - and they were shocked by what they knew about.PRIEST: Do you think -- I find that a lot of people believe people who go to the media hate the administration. You know, they're Democrats or liberal Democrats, even. Is there anything that you can say about folks at the agency in terms of -- we know that the military tends to be more Republican.RISEN: Right.PRIEST: What about the CIA?RISEN: I think at the CIA -- as you know, the CIA -- this is a broad overgeneralization, simplification -- I think the CIA rank and file hated Bill Clinton with a passion. They thought he was feckless on foreign policy. They hated John Deutch even more than they hated Bill Clinton, and they kind of liked George Tenet because he got them more money and helped them around.I would categorize the average -- if you had to ask me what the average CIA person is, I would say they're a moderate Republican. They liked George Bush I, and they thought they were going to like George Bush II. And they kind of like the -- I think they see themselves in kind of the centrist foreign policy tradition of the Republican Party. And I think they've been deeply dismayed by the direction that foreign policy in this administration has taken and especially on Iraq, where the professionals were really not listening.PRIEST: So you brought up the NSA story, and there's obviously some lingering questions about putting together that story. And one of the obvious questions is, as the story pointed out, you had a lot of this information, although it insinuates you didn't have it all, a year before you published it. First, can you talk about -- does the Times have a process for considering national security concerns on the part of the administration that you can describe in a generic way? And then can you throw any more light on the year pause?RISEN: No, I can't. (Laughter.) I can just say that I think that the decision to publish it was a real public service and that all this other talk about what happened was inside baseball and that it really doesn't matter. And I think that, you know, it's a funny world today, with all the bloggers and the media critics, and everybody's got a take on the media. And the thing I've always thought is, you know, what would have happened if Woodward and Bernstein had 500 blogs on their case in 1972, you know, after they'd written five, 10 stories about Watergate, and you had -- what if Arianna Huffington and Matt Drudge were on their ass every day? PRIEST: (Laughs.)RISEN: They never would have gotten to the bottom of anything. And if you had Bill O'Reilly and -- I mean --PRIEST: Is it because they wouldn't be paying attention to the target and then be off paying attention -- RISEN: I believe it's paralyzing to pay attention to all that and that you've just got to ignore it and just keep going. And so that's what I'm trying to do.PRIEST: So on the question of a process, can you just take it away from your own story, and if there's any way to explain --RISEN: I don't know that there's any specific process. I just think, you know -- I just think that, you know, they had -- you know, that we handled this is in a way that was professional, and we ended up in the right place. So that's about all I can say.PRIEST: Okay. To talk about the book for a minute, I -- instead of going chapter by chapter or subject by subject, I found some of the most interesting things -- the personalities involved and the motives of those people.So could you summarize how you, after -- at the end of this process, saw George Bush and George Tenet? First Bush, his involvement with the issues that you lay out in the book -- you kind of reaffirm this idea that he's in a bubble, but --RISEN: Yeah, I don't -- I guess maybe that's -- that would be too strong. Maybe I didn't articulate it very well in the book. I guess what I would say is that I think Bush is not an idiot. He's not a fool. He's in charge. I think my view from talking to a lot of people is that he sets a grand vision, a strategic vision of where he wants the administration to go, and then he leaves it up to others to make tactical and -- decisions and implement things.And I think the difficulty and the problem that he's encountered with that is that he has given so much leeway to people like Rumsfeld and Cheney and others that, in the end, their tactical decisions have a major effect on the substance of the strategy. And the case in point, obviously, is Iraq, this lack of postwar planning.From everything I've -- people I talked to -- he made it very clear, when the Defense Department came to the White House and said we -- essentially, they wanted -- not in so many words, but it was clear that what they wanted was a turnkey operation with Ahmad Chalabi in charge of -- you know, they were going to fly in a new government, more or less. And Bush said no, we're not going to do that, we're not going to -- as one person said, the president repeatedly made it clear to Rumsfeld and others he wasn't going to put his thumb on the scales of Iraq.Now -- so he made it very clear he wanted democracy. But beyond that, he left -- I think he left far too much up to what he might consider the details, but I think the details ended up being the substance of the policy. You know, he had this working group at the -- this interagency group at the NSC and other State Department and other groups formulating ideas for -- and guidelines for postwar planning, and then allowed Rumsfeld to just ignore it.PRIEST: How much did you get involved with the issue of WMD and whether or not it existed? Is that something he relegated and just entrusted those --RISEN: I think -- yeah, I think on WMD he just -- I think -- well, I think it's more of a nuanced case here. I think that in the six months or so after 9/11 there was a fierce debate in the Bush administration over Iraq-al Qaeda ties, not about WMD. Wolfowitz and Feith and others at the Pentagon wanted to -- I think they saw the Saddam-9/11 or the Iraq-al Qaeda tie as the silver bullet that would trump everything else. And so they were pushing hard for that, and the CIA pushed back. It was the one issue I think they pushed back on. And so by late 2002 is when WMD came to the fore. And I don't think it was the central issue until the months right before the invasion. And I think it was hurried and the whole process was kind of botched. I don't blame Bush for that. I think -- and I don't think he lied about anything. I think -- and I don't think anybody lied. I believe they truly thought there was WMD there. I think that they assumed it.The problem was that the CIA allowed themselves to get captured by groupthink; that they said, "Okay, we assume there's WMD there, and so we're going to dismiss all of the indicators to the contrary as part of Saddam's denial and deception program."PRIEST: And you say that the CIA was captured by a war fever, that it just assumed it's going to happen, get on board. How do you get to that point if your mission is to, you know, be the truth teller?RISEN: That's a question that I don't know the answer to -- why this happened. I mean, I can kind of lay out the symptoms. And it's difficult to -- to me, it was like -- it's like workplace harassment. It's like sexual harassment or racial discrimination in the workplace. You know, it's always a he said/she said type thing. Political interference with intelligence is in the air, but how do you prove it? And I don't think you can prove it. To me, it is -- but the end result was a climate in which people knew what the right answers were, and I don't know how that exactly happened.I don't think anybody knows. I don't think the people in charge know how it happened. I think they would still deny that it happened, but it's clearly happened. And I think it was -- it's one of those great things that -- of interpersonal dynamics that's really hard to point to any one piece of evidence --PRIEST: Well, you do mention specifically that, you know, there's some -- there's a dismissal of dissidents, anybody who questioned.RISEN: Yeah.PRIEST: That dismissal comes from somewhere. Tenet? His deputy, perhaps?RISEN: Yeah, it's difficult to tell exactly. I mean, what I think happened was that no one -- I don't think anyone lied. I think everyone believed, in the leadership of the Bush administration, that there was WMD. What they did not -- what the dissidents were saying -- they were not saying there's no WMD. What they were saying was, the evidence is weak, and we don't have very good intelligence on this.PRIEST: But it's so weak. In the case you would -- like the Curveball case --RISEN: Right.PRIEST: -- in which they don't even bother to check the source --RISEN: Right.PRIEST: -- now how do you get to that point by then, when --RISEN: I think at that point it was so late in the process that the leadership said, you know, the train's already left the station. And I remember one source telling me that he got the distinct impression that the leadership was saying: They're going to war anyway. It doesn't matter. We'll find it when we get there. And I think that was the -- by this whole process of -- that's why I think the debate over the Iraq-al Qaeda ties plays into the way in which WMD was handled, because I think for the first six months or so after 9/11, as I said, when they were focused on Iraq-al Qaeda, and they had this big fight, then they switched to this thing where they thought there was greater agreement and consensus within the government on -- and that process, because they had just, I think, just been focused on other things, was compressed. And by that time -- by the time you focus on WMD in the summer and fall of 2002, you know, it's very clear the administration's already on their way to war. And I think that message was already clear at the CIA -- you know, "Hey, they're going to war anyway."PRIEST: So in what you're saying, you're rejecting those who say that there was a cabal that pushed falsified information, the whole Office of Special Plans that we read about in the Defense Department. RISEN: Right.PRIEST: And I assume that you looked for evidence of that and you just didn't --RISEN: Yeah. No, I think, as I say, that it's a more subtle argument. I think that there were people -- as I said, everyone more or less assumed that Saddam had WMD, but there were people who said we don't have very good intelligence on that. And those people were not listened to, and they were shunted to the side.PRIEST: Talk about Charlie Allen's efforts for a minute and describe, if you would, who he is.RISEN: Yeah, there was a -- I think Charlie Allen is this guy who was in charge of kind of an arcane office that -- his main job was really to look for gaps in intelligence collection, things around the world that the CIA or the whole intelligence community was not doing a particularly good job on. And one of the things that I was told he looked at was Iraq WMD. And he came -- they came up with this idea of sending relatives of Iraqi weapons scientists back to Iraq, people who were in the West, to actually ask their relatives, you know, "What are you doing now? Are you still working on WMD?"And one of the people involved in this program was a doctor from Cleveland, a woman Iraqi exile. And she went back and met with her brother, who had been in the nuclear program. And he told -- and she went back to Baghdad in September of 2002. And her brother -- you know, the CIA sent her, and she asked all these questions about the nuclear program. And her brother looked at her incredulously and said, you know, "Don't you know? There is no WMD. There is no nuclear program."And she came back to Washington to meet with the CIA and told them, you know, "He says there is no nuclear program." And they had other relatives who did the same thing. And this intelligence - they filed these reports, and they didn't go anywhere, because the CIA, I think, believed that this was all part of the denial and deception program of Saddam. And I think that was the way in which, as I said, contrary evidence was seen as Saddam's -- this brilliant plan by Saddam to fool us. And anybody who came up with something that said there is WMD, that information went right to the top very rapidly.And so that was the -- I think that's the subtle thing that is lost in the partisan debate over this, where they say Bush lied or Bush -- or whatever, is -- that's just a red herring. I think it's a much more complex thing, where it was this climate that was created where people began to just kind of ignore -- I think what they lost really was the intellectual discipline on how to conduct intelligence analysis.PRIEST: So one more question, and then we'll open it to everybody else. The last chapter is called, "The Rogue Operation" and deals with Iran and starts out with this startling revelation that I've never seen anywhere else: that they made a mistake and ended up rolling up or getting rolled up a number of their contacts in Iran. So my question is, since Iran is so center, seemingly, to what they might be looking at now, can you judge now how damaging that mistake was to the sources that they have in Iran still today or don't have anymore?RISEN: Well, I know the CIA has disputed the level of damage from that mistake. They don't dispute that the mistake happened. Since my book came out, they've disputed how much damage it did. I think what it shows is that they admit that that mistake was made and that it was enormous. I think they -- from everything I've been told, they have very little insight into the Iranian nuclear program. And they really, I think, as your paper reported some months ago, that -- it was a related story -- I think it was Dafna Linzer -- about how the NIE -- about saying it was another 10 years. I think if you say that they could have a nuclear program sometime in the next 10 years, that means we don't really have a clue.And I think that's essentially where they are. They are -- and I think it's a real problem now, given this track record on Iraq. How do you present credibly to the world any argument based on intelligence again about WMD in another country that starts with the letter I? (Soft laughter.)PRIEST: (Chuckles.) All right. Countries that start with I.Now this -- consider this the appetizer for the State of the Union, because -- (laughter) -- the book has every large issue that Bush is going to talk about today.Okay. Let's start up here.QUESTIONER: Yeah -- (name and affiliation off mike). For those of us who haven't read it, can you tell us what are -- what you think are the key points of your book?RISEN: Well, I think the theme that I -- I mean, one of the problems writing a book like this is that it is -- when you get so close to the information, how do you develop a theme? And the thing that I think is the theme of it is -- I think after 9/11 you had a problem where there was a lack of checks and balances on the way in which foreign policy and national security was developed. You had, I think, over the 30 or 40 years -- really, since World War II, you'd had -- the American foreign policy was always kind of pushed towards the center by the bureaucracy, by career professionals, the interagency process, just by lobbyists, by the American interests around the world.Whenever there was a big issue, it would get chewed over and studied and reviewed. And eventually, we'd kind of be -- you know, even whether it was Republican or Democrat, over time, you know, we would kind of be somewhere in this range that was more or less moderate on how we dealt with foreign policy. I mean, there were obviously exceptions.But I think after 9/11 -- one of the things someone told me which really struck me was that what happened was, the principals were meeting every day. And normally on an issue, a big issue, the principals, meaning the Cabinet level type officials, would only meet maybe once every six months on an issue. And during the interim period, there had been this enormous interagency process where everybody would chew over things and fight over things. And the end result would always be that policies would be kind of pushed back toward the center. But when you had Rumsfeld and Rice and all these people meeting every morning or every day for however long that frantic period was going on, I think that had a major effect on the way in which policy happened. And the bureaucracy, the career experts, couldn't catch up. So I think between 9/11 and the beginning -- and the invasion of Iraq, policy was on the fly, and it was being made verbally, basically, within small groups. And the professionals didn't really know what was going on. And I think that led to a veering off in different directions of policy that were -- some people believe were radical.PRIEST: Over here.QUESTIONER: Thank you. One comment. I was at a conference in the U.K. about a year ago, and Brits and Americans were asking how we both blew it on the question of WMD. And your thesis would be very much what the Brits think. There was tremendous pressure from Number 10 to come up with what they wanted to hear, just as there was from the White House.RISEN: Right.QUESTIONER: My question is, did you see the roots of our current approach toward torture and interrogation? And where did that come from?RISEN: Well, I think -- I mean, the issue is -- goes back, I think -- something that I really struggled with is -- and I couldn't get a satisfactory answer -- you know, it's something that Dana has written extensively about, probably better than anybody in Washington. The issue of how did the -- you start in early -- late 2001, early 2002 with a decision by the president and by people around him to let the CIA take the lead on capturing and interrogating al Qaeda prisoners and to keep them secretly overseas, away from the U.S. judicial process.And I think somehow that we ended up with Abu Ghraib, with National Guardsmen from Western Maryland. And how that migrated from one place to the other is the story that we are still struggling with, I think. But I think it was clearly a continuum that we are still trying to fill in the blank with, don't you think? I mean --PRIEST: Yeah, and I also think there was a decision that we're at war, and war powers give you -- as you've seen in that torture memo, the August 1, 2002, memo -- the commander in chief can disregard things. And that's what his lawyers were saying, and that's what they wanted to do anyway. RISEN: Yeah.PRIEST: That really freed their hands. And they, unlike -- they pushed the authority down into the field, where field people who had no real experience as interrogators, because the agency hadn't done that for so many years -- RISEN: Right. Right.PRIEST: -- were now being -- I think you're right -- on verbal -- a lot of times on verbal okay --RISEN: Right.PRIEST: -- being faced with grave situations and knowing that they'd be covered if they pushed it to an extreme.RISEN: The question I think none of us -- we're all struggling with is, how did you get from a CIA operation to something that the military is involved with, for the first time in modern history, where they're ignoring the Geneva Convention?PRIEST: Yeah.RISEN: And that is the leap that -- you know, we've kind of reported -- everybody in Washington has kind of reported both of those things, but we don't have that leap right there, you know.PRIEST: Up here, in the very beginning -- QUESTIONER: I'm Pete Peterson. Some of us who are not experts find this NSA situation a bit of a puzzlement. We hear the experts come to the council and explain that the existing laws have immense latitude and flexibility; you can get clearance for almost anything, you can even do it retrospectively and so forth. And yet the administration takes the position of really not using the existing legislation.What do you think are the real reasons for their point of view? I could give you at least two options. One, this is just a raw continuation of a presidential power grab, just generically. Or are there limitations in the existing legislation that do make the implementation of that law difficult in practice? I'm really confused about what the explanation is. And if so, what are those problems?RISEN: That's an excellent question that we have struggled with ourselves. And I think it's a mix. I think it's both, frankly. I think that there are -- I think FISA was created -- the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act was -- 1978 -- was created in an era in which the telecommunications industry was completely different than it is today. Today it's far more globalized and much more complex, and I don't pretend to understand it fully. I mean, that's about the level of my knowledge. I know that it's more complicated today than it used to be.And so I think there was -- for a long time, my impression is, there was a long -- for a long time, NSA has wanted new powers, way before 9/11, wanted new -- they were frustrated with the limitations that FISA put, given the changing nature of the global telecommunications network. I think that was one thing.The other thing was, as you said, a belief in the administration -- as you said, the lawyers had this belief of broad presidential power. And the third factor, I think, is the immense technical capabilities of the NSA go way beyond anything that most people understand. And I'm just starting to understand it. They have - I think it's still -- probably still true they have more computing power at Fort Meade than anywhere else in the world. And they have the ability to do almost -- you know, to manipulate the data and the information in a lot of very interesting ways.And my belief is that one thing -- one reason they did not go to Congress and one reason they did not ask the courts for approval on this is that the program is very large and is doing a lot of very voluminous things, which we've talked about in the paper and in my book some.PRIEST: I thought I found a clue to that question in the book when you talked about NSA having a checklist of suspects, I guess, and that people that were on that list were considered -- that alone amounted to enough of probable cause to go after them -- RISEN: Right.PRIEST: -- even though that checklist was not vetted by anyone else, right?RISEN: Yeah. That's one -- that's -- I think the problem that people came to me about -- one of the things that led people to come to me was this idea that they couldn't believe that the administration was letting NSA officials decide probable cause. And so that was one of the real -- that's where it gets back to this issue of - I think it was more -- as much presidential power and prerogative as anything else.PRIEST: Okay, how about in the back, in the orange scarf? Or orange -- yeah, okay. (Chuckles.) Can't really --QUESTIONER: Hi, Dana. Wendy Luers, Foundation for Civil Society.Going from the connection between CIA and military, in your articles on rendition and the CIA planes going around, there has been a lot of talk in the Balkans about using Camp Bondsteel in Kosovo as one of the places where they were landing. Can either one of you verify that at all, and talk further about the utilization of not only foreign airports, but our military bases abroad?PRIEST: Well, in the lists of -- there are now lists, a combination of Euro-control lists, plane-spotter lists. We have tail numbers now. You know, the CIA didn't do a great job. Their cover staff, you know, should all be fired from that tradecraft. (Laughter.) Really, once you got onto this, it wasn't that hard to find the rest of the planes.So now you have all of Europe trying to look for the planes, and as a result we have a lot of information. There was not -- I haven't seen Kosovo. But there are military airports, and I think some of the records aren't true, you know, that some of them are falsified in some way, and it's hard to -- it would be hard to really figure out which ones are.As for the military airports, yes, they use military airports quite a bit. However, I think as this controversy has bubbled up, less and less. And I know for instance they've changed their -- the black sites, those secret prisons. Now they have a rule: no black sites near soldiers. And that started actually when they got -- they had a little black site that was on Guantanamo and was discovered, and they left Guantanamo. And I think the military really doesn't have anything to do with this because they've got their own problems. So no black sites near soldiers. Yes use of military airfields still, but I would guess less so now.And there's no firm evidence that I've seen that Kosovo was used. Kosovo has its -- Bondsteel has its own military prisons in which the military rules, and I think a lot of reporters in Europe sort of mix the two up. But I wouldn't close the door totally.RISEN: The one thing I would add about the prison, CIA prison, issue is that I think it's one of the things that has angered and frustrated career CIA people more than anything else. Because I kept hearing repeatedly -- I'm sure you've heard this a million times -- people said, you know, I don't recognize the agency I joined.PRIEST: Yeah. In fact, the feeling that the CIA has lost its espionage role and taken on a large paramilitary role, in part because, you know, Tenet got kudos from Bush on that. You could cross people off on the cards that Bush would keep on the high-value detainees. You could show progress. But it's a different agency.Let me go one more time back in the back, way back here. Yeah. Yes.QUESTIONER: I want to go back to the L word, to the lying question. And I want to try to ask this in a nuancy way, and I'm really sort of asking your -- your view of this as you wrote the book, and your view of this as how the media handles the question.I don't think -- I'll say it personally -- I personally never thought that what you pose as the red herring -- as the lie ever was a lie -- it never occurred to me that people in the administration said let's make up a story and then let's carry that through. It seemed to me the issue that it's a -- that you seem somewhat dismissive of, was -- occurred as the issue shifted from whether there were connections to the -- as they shifted from that -- and by the way, my view of that is, the agency simply got exhausted, and that was -- they fought one fight and sort of won it, and then they said they weren't going to win another one. But as the issue shifted to the WMD question, what we know throughout that entire period was that there were deep, deep disputes within the intelligence community about what was real, what was not real, what was truth, what was not truth.We also know that throughout certainly the latter half of that year -- and I'm talking about 2002 -- every senior member of the national security team of the Bush administration used the nuclear cloud analogy. And that in itself strikes me as pretty damn close to a mistruth. But it also seems to me that with respect to the nuclear issue, a president is given such automatic belief -- after all, who -- I mean, we can quarrel with what our president says about taxes tonight, but you can't -- but who absolutely knows, except someone who has a -- that therefore, that whether or not the story got made up, there was certainly a -- it's fair to say there was a considerable mistruth implied about degree of certainty on the second half of that year. And I'm curious about what you thought about it at the time.RISEN: Well, I agree -- I mean I think -- I guess what I would say is you see all the symptoms of what you're saying, but you don't see the cause. You can't prove -- you can't prove -- you see the systems of the politicization deep in the bowels of the CIA when you talk to people, but what you don't see, and what I cannot find, is where that started.And I think, as I said, it's like workplace harassment. I mean, where does that come from? It's in the air. It's a group dynamic that I don't think you can blame on any one person. And that's really -- I struggled with that, and I still struggle with it. And maybe you had something.PRIEST: But are you also asking -- so that's a big generalization -- I mean an exaggeration -- of what, if you knew what they knew, you could say. So it's an exaggeration, and you had a media question in there somewhere, right? Like did the media --QUESTIONER: (Off mike.)PRIEST: Yeah.QUESTIONER: When the most senior members of the national security apparatus of an administration use the nuclear cloud analogy --RISEN: But I think they believed it. This is what I'm getting to.QUESTIONER: It would have been a different thing -- I don't mean to monopolize -- it would have been a different thing if someone had said, you know, there are 10 issues about weapons of mass destruction that are currently under dispute. We the administration don't know the truth one way or another, but we believe the nuclear cloud analogy. That would be one thing to say to the American people. But to say it without a single qualification for months strikes me as a different kind of question. And you all knew that there were disputes going on at the time. Anybody who had any connection with the intelligence community knew that there were disputes --PRIEST: So do you have a question in that one? And would you write it? (Laughs.)QUESTIONER: It didn't strike me that the media did a terribly good job during the period of planning.RISEN: The basic point, just to reiterate, I think, is that I really don't believe that they went out publicly and lied. I mean, they may have -- they certainly had political talking points in which they shortened things and overemphasized things.I still believe -- because it got down to this -- I mean, the reason I say this is because the people I talked to were deep down in the organization. There's no way the president was talking to these people, and they weren't hearing from George Tenet. They were talking to their own people. And so I just think that there was a groupthink that captured the whole government that is a phenomenon that's very difficult to understand.PRIEST: But you're also asking, did it capture the media? And when I -- and having been a reporter trying to work on that, we wrote at the Post -- and the Times did, too -- we wrote a lot of stories about dissent, but -- and many of them, you know, I think, were underplayed in our pages. And we've done a lot of internal -- you know, we had a lot of internal arguments about that. But they were in -- they were in the paper. But you're faced with as reporters not being able to do what you haven't been able to do, which is finding a smoking gun after all these months. So then you're still weighing judgment. And the stories that say, Bush says this and he's exaggerating, but there's some dissent, they're almost not -- they don't weigh as much in one sense as the president and the Cabinet coming out and making these dramatic statements because we can't -- we're not -- we're can't be firm about it, we can't be clear.RISEN: I think what happened in the media reflected what was going on inside the intelligence community, that the people that -- the dissidents knew that there was something, that the evidence wasn't very strong. How do you prove a negative? You know, I wrote some of those stories about people skeptical of intelligence -- you know, Walter and I and others -- you and other people.PRIEST: Right.RISEN: But how do you prove -- how do you prove a negative? That's the question. And so the -- it was really a matter within the -- I think it was within the CIA -- that if you had curveball or you had somebody else, you've got something specific that you can take to the afternoon meeting. But if all you do is you come to the meeting and say I don't believe what this guy's telling you or I have problems with that intelligence, they'll say, okay, what do you have? And I think that's what happened.PRIEST: Yeah.QUESTIONER: Hi, I'm Richard Solomon of Public Perspectives at Columbia University.I wanted to bring you a little more up to today if I could. Because clearly, as I read your book over the last weekend, it's a pretty unremittingly negative view of what happened in the last few years, probably justifiably so. But as you talk to sources today, do they see we really learned a lot; that the organizations are different, the players are new, we learn from our mistakes and therefore we're in a better position than we were? Or where -- where we now are; do people still -- are they still afraid to tell the truth upward? So would you talk a little bit about where you think our intelligence efforts are today relative to two to four years ago?RISEN: Someone who was recently in Iraq for the CIA told me that they are not allowed to go outside the Green Zone because they are afraid of getting kidnapped, and that to me says everything you need to know about the CIA in Iraq. Maybe you've heard differently, but --PRIEST: Well, you know, what about --RISEN: I think that -- well, my point is --PRIEST: What about Iran? What about Porter Goss' leadership?RISEN: Porter Goss is no longer the leader of the intelligence community. And I think that's what you -- we had maybe the worst combination of things happen in the fall of 2004, where you had -- I mean, I'll say something politically incorrect here -- which was you had a group of widows from 9/11 take control of the legislative effort to reform the intelligence community. And they were fooled, I think, by the Republican leadership into thinking that adding another layer of bureaucracy was going to solve the problem. And the idea that the DNI is any better than the DCI I think is a joke.PRIEST: Well, what about the CIA that has to analyze -- you know, take a RAND for the moment. Do you think that they've put -- either that they don't have groupthink as a result of this experience, or they've put things in place that will guard against another Iraq experience?RISEN: It's possible that they've done that recently. I don't see any evidence of it. I don't -- but I don't know. I mean, maybe in the last few months, maybe they -- maybe they'll surprise me. But I don't see any evidence. I think they are more cautious. I mean, I think the -- their reporting on Iran, I've been told, is more cautious than it was on Iraq. But that doesn't seem to change the political debate within the Bush administration. I think basically the CIA's standing within the government is at a low, maybe an all-time low, because their credibility is shot.PRIEST: Can you say -- is there anything positive to come out of Negroponte's position and appointment? Is he going to do anything that needed to be done?RISEN: He was a --PRIEST: Stand up to Rumsfeld, for example?RISEN: Well, that's the question. I don't think we've seen that yet. I think if I was Negroponte, what I would want is a very public confrontation with Donald Rumsfeld, and he hasn't done that yet. And I think until he has a public fight with Rumsfeld, we won't know where -- what the standing of the DNI is going to be.PRIEST: Yes.QUESTIONER: Roland Paul, I'm a lawyer.Maybe we could put this in -- I'd welcome your perspective about WMD, if I may kind of give a little bit of the -- in one place you slid between chemical and biological weapons on the one hand and nuclear on the other. I don't think that the administration has ever said -- but maybe Cheney making one slight slip -- that they had nuclear weapons. They never said that. They said they had chemical and biological. And so the -- and what we now --RISEN: Before the war in Iraq?QUESTIONER: What's that?RISEN: You mean before the war in Iraq?QUESTIONER: Yes, yes.RISEN: They said they had -- they said they had all of them.PRIEST: They were reconstituting their nuclear program.RISEN: Yeah.QUESTIONER: They didn't say they had nuclear weapons.RISEN: Oh, no, they said they were reconstituting.QUESTIONER: Yeah, that's what I mean. And what we know about their nuclear program now wasn't that far from what they were saying. In other words, we know they had lowly enriched uranium. We know that they had buried -- you know, Mahdi Obeidi had buried everything he needed to reconstitute it. He wrote in your paper that with the snap of Saddam's fingers we could have a nuclear program. And on the chemical and biological they were wrong, but there is a lot of evidence that he could quickly reconstitute it. And some authorities -- one is Hans Blix -- and the other thing in that regard was -- well, actually your colleague, Bob Woodward, in his book -- if you read on page 422 of Woodward's book, the president -- he says, well, what about WMD? And the president says, well, he could have reconstituted them quickly. And I remember David Kay -- I'll be done -- David Kay, in his testimony before the Armed Services Committee, said that Saddam and his two sons went three times to their scientists and said, how quickly can we reconstitute them? And they said quick.RISEN: I don't think there is any question that if the sanctions had been lifted, if the world had decided to ignore Iraq for a few years, he would have redeveloped nuclear -- WMD of some kind. That's clear. I think -- I don't think there is any doubt that he was waiting for the sanctions to be lifted. The question, although, of course is, did he have the resources to really do that if the time came.QUESTIONER: Hi, I'm Ted Sorensen. This has been terrific.I want to ask about the source that is the most important to me, which happens to be The New York Times. I am an admirer, and of you also, Mr. Risen. But a long time ago when I was in government, the Times, as you might imagine, came to me and said that their role required them to know all the truth and facts about the government.Now I'm on the other side as a reader, and I'd like to be sure that that is still the role of The New York Times. (Laughter.) And I would like to know whether you or the Times is either used by either the CIA or the White House, the State Department or others, or if the chain of intelligence ever gets a little mixed, and sometimes the Times is the source for the general atmosphere inside the CIA or the department instead of the other way around?RISEN: I think every reporter I've ever known gets used every single day. We all get used by our sources. That's what the business is. We get used, and we try to figure out how we're getting used, and whether we can turn it around and take advantage of that. I mean, that's the process. People use us and we try to use them, and it happens to every single reporter.PRIEST: How about standing up in the back over there?QUESTIONER: I still don't understand -- (off mike, comes on mike) -- I still don't understand why you held the story at The New York Times for a year. We all sit around and discuss it. And can't you shed a little more light than you did shed on that?RISEN: No. (Laughter.)PRIEST: Well, can I try this? You've been accused of holding it for political reasons, that it was too close to the election. Can you just take that off the table?RISEN: I can just say that I think it was the right decision to publish it when we did.x x x Yes?QUESTIONER: I'm David Vidal. I used to be a reporter; I'm now with the Commerce Department. I have a question that relates to, I guess, reporting ethos. I've been in meetings here for the past several weeks, and I've heard things like fear among Democrats, fear in the country. You talk about war fever and an environment and groupthink, as if all of these are individuals and basically parts of our government; but none of them are people. Are you telling us or would you have us believe that you are actually reporting that some of these momentous effects that have affected our lives have no causes, that there is no accountability, and that all we can trace for this is fevers and environments and groupthinks?RISEN: No, all I can say is that I don't know the full answer. I mean, I'm sure there is an answer. I mean I don't know, it may take 20 years for all of us to figure it all out. All I can say is that what I've been able to determine so far are the symptoms. And knowing human nature, I think it's unlikely that you can ever trace it to one source. I don't think there is a smoking gun. I don't think there was a meeting where Dick Cheney and George Bush said, well, let's make the CIA lie to us, or let's tell a bunch of lies. I just don't think that happened. I think there was a series of incremental actions and decisions throughout the government that led to what happened.And I think the overarching decision was that President Bush wanted to invade Iraq, and everything flowed from that. But beyond saying that, I can't prove anything beyond that.PRIEST: Let's try again in the back.QUESTIONER: Chris Isham with ABC. There's been quite a bit of confusion about exactly what the NSA program did or did not do. I wonder if you could just clarify what your understanding is at this moment, both from your reporting in the book and subsequently, what the president authorized, and what the program did?RISEN: Well, we're still trying to report further on that. I think the -- my understanding is, and what we've written so far, is that there was a decision by the president to allow the NSA to get back-door access to a series of major telecommunication switches into the U.S. telecommunications network, essentially getting right into the bloodstream of the telecommunications and e-mail in and out of the United States, and that those switches were kind of the gateways in and out of the U.S. for a lot of traffic; and that they were doing this without search warrants; and that this allowed them to both eavesdrop on individuals without search warrants and to conduct broad data-mining operations within e-mail and telephone and cell phone conversations in and out of the country .And one of the questions we still haven't answered is what kind of abuses they were of this program. I mean, that's something that everybody has been speculating about, but we don't have any strong answers on.QUESTIONER: What do you mean by data mining?RISEN: Well, that's one thing we're still trying to understand fully. What we believe was that there was something called pattern analysis, where they are able to look at the frequency of calls from one number to another, the time of day of calls, the duration of calls between different numbers, and to use that kind of information -- and for e-mail traffic as well, and to use that information to develop analysis of likely relationships between people.QUESTIONER: All of it overseas to the U.S.RISEN: Yes.PRIEST: But do you think once they got access to the switches, they're not looking at everything they have access to, right? They have certain things they're going to.RISEN: That's what they say. That's what they say, and that's what -- the problem is, there is no oversight of the program.PRIEST: Okay, jump in, third time, red shirt.QUESTIONER: Jim Dingeman from -- (inaudible) -- World Report. I'd just like to ask you what your opinion is of the whole impact of this unitary executive branch theory that we've seen bandied about with Judge Sam Alito, which in particular has been deployed in regard to the revelations of you and your colleagues in December about NSA surveillance. And what do you think it raises in terms of the questions of freedom of the press and the ability of the press to inquire into these issues without having the Damocles Sword of the executive branch on their heads?RISEN: (Laughs.) Well, you could answer that as well as -- PRIEST: No, you're -- (laughs).RISEN: I mean, that's the problem we face covering national security, is you've got one party running the government, and so there's -- you can have an expansive view of presidential power when your party controls Congress and most of the courts.PRIEST: I also think that -- I think Bush revealed a lot when he started to defend the NSA program. He revealed a lot about their legal thinking. And it's not only his commander-in-chief powers at a time of war, but it's also that Congress did pass a war resolution which, despite the Democrats' claim, does not use the word "Afghanistan." It says everybody responsible for 9/11. And if you follow that trail, that gets you to al Qaeda worldwide. So it's much broader than they're willing to say now. So he believes, and his government lawyers have gone forward and -- I'll give you another example, ban on assassinations. If you are in a self-defense mode and you have a list of terrorists that you know want to commit war against the United States, that's no longer assassination; it's targeted killings that are permitted under this idea.And it goes through a whole lot of other things. So a lot of them we have not been able to report on, but there's a whole slew of things that they are able to do in the special operations world, in the clandestine service, in NSA, probably in the NRO. And they all rest on a state of war and then bolstered by the congressional war powers resolution.I kind of wonder why, if this is so controversial in Congress now, someone doesn't try to say, "Well, that's not what we meant," but try to say that in some actual -- you know, with some legislative language or sense of the Congress or whatever. But they are not trying to do that. So I think Congress sort of wants to have it both ways too.RISEN: I think one of the other issues is something you hinted at, which is that in a war on terrorism, the Pentagon and the Bush administration have argued that the entire world is a battlefield; that the global war on terror, GWOT, means that everywhere is a battlefield.And if you carry that to a legal construct, then that means that any place in the world is open to U.S. military action, and that would mean also U.S. intelligence action. And so that changes the whole dynamic. If you think -- and I think that's where Rumsfeld has gotten this enormous running room, that you can -- that the Pentagon can operate anywhere in the world and declare that this is part of the preparation of the battlefield for future combat operations.PRIEST: Including the United States, where you see this growth in domestic military activity.Okay, we have time for one more question, and then I'm sure Jim will stay around and answer more. QUESTIONER: Yes, I'm Dick Garwin. And I would welcome a little less passive voice here. That is, the CIA let itself be captured by groupthink. And Dana Priest said, well, we haven't found a smoking gun. But that doesn't mean there isn't a smoking gun, and you say maybe 20 years more. So let's try to parse that a little bit. Suppose we didn't have, hadn't had Douglas Feith's Office of Special Plans and Cheney. Would the capture by groupthink have happened, do you think?RISEN: Yes, I think -- well, it's an interesting question. As I said, I think the effect of the -- basically what the Pentagon -- the neocon fight against the CIA was not about WMD. It was about the Iraq-al-Qaeda link or the 9/11-Saddam link. It was about Prague. It was about, you know, the stuff that the Weekly Standard keeps beating a dead horse with.And I think the effect of that was not so much on that as an issue within the government. The effect, I think, was to compress the WMD argument into a few months at the end of 2002, and so that you had less time. It kind of sucked the oxygen out of the time you could have had to argue WMD, so that by the time you began to really argue WMD, by the fall of 2002, the troops were already flowing to Iraq -- I mean to Kuwait, and the train was already leaving the station.And so there was the sense within the CIA that, man, this argument is really late; you know, look at all those brigades flowing to Kuwait. We already had this argument. We already argued over Iraq-al-Qaeda; now can we really argue over this? So I think that was the effect of the Office of Special Plans, was kind of this unintended consequence, which I think is pretty interesting.PRIEST: Okay. Thank you all for coming. And thank you. (Applause.) (C) COPYRIGHT 2006, FEDERAL NEWS SERVICE, INC., 1000 VERMONT AVE.NW; 5TH FLOOR; WASHINGTON, DC - 20005, USA. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 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