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31 August 2007

Pleasing the Principal

In a perceptive analysis of the origin and operation of the CIA’s Black Sites (The New Yorker, August 13, 2007), Tyler Drumheller, a former CIA operative, concludes that the real reason for its establishment of extralegal detention and interrogation locations was the impulse of its director to please his boss. That was the mindset of George Tenet, who came out of the culture of Capital Hill, where he was a staffer for a senior Senator on the Intelligence Committee. His attitude towards security information was to find pieces that served the political agendas of Congressional Committee members and, ultimately, Presidents. It wasn’t to obtain information as close to the truth as possible, for the use of his principals; Drumheller apparently believes that political agendas do not commonly have much use for truth.

Of course, Tenet had originally been drafted for the CIA job by a Democratic President who was in need of compliant agency heads who could sail through Congressional confirmation hearings. He was exactly the kind of intelligence chief that suited the succeeding President and Vice President who were more interested in tweaking the institutions of government for sustaining political power than in finding solutions to underlying problems.

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