Friday, November 27, 2009

Opinion

Why Congress and the CIA Clash, and Why That Hurts National Security

Each side has its reasons, and its faults, that result in a relationship that hurts national security

Posted August 3, 2009

Margaret Henoch retired in March after 22 years of service as a senior CIA official.

The recent dispute over intelligence briefings—with members of Congress complaining that they were insufficiently informed of reported plans by the Central Intelligence Agency to kill al Qaeda leaders—highlights the dysfunction haunting the CIA and Congress.

There are several sources for the tension plaguing the relationship. First, it is colored by American ambivalence toward intelligence. Historically, our geographic isolation and freedom from invasion protected the country, and we had limited need for the kind of information that intelligence should provide. That limited need resulted in a limited understanding of the profession. We love the intelligence game as played by 24's Jack Bauer or James Bond, but when we see it in all its real-life messiness, our Puritan sensibilities, derived from the Founding Fathers' concern over European-style court intrigue, make us squirm.

Against this background, congressional support for the CIA has waxed and waned and has at best been ambiguous. The requirement to brief is vague. Legally, the CIA has to ensure that Congress is kept fully and currently informed of intelligence activities as well as significant anticipated activity. The requirement does not, however, specify the meaning of "fully," "currently," or "anticipated." This latitude obliges the CIA to make decisions based on what Congress may think two, four, or 10 years in the future, rather than on solid reasoning.

And unlike other elements of national security, there is no constituency in Congress for the CIA. The enormously expensive F-22 fighter plane, for example, which has not been used in either of our two current wars and is not backed by either President Obama or Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, retained congressional support for years because it was economically important in several House districts. The CIA is small, is concentrated in the Washington area, is not economically important, and is too controversial. As a result, it can count on no such constituency.

There is debate over whether members of Congress or their staff leak classified information. I suspect the answer is not as clear as the public would like. However, members use the CIA to score domestic political points in ways that are frustrating to intelligence professionals. Few members of Congress were career intelligence officers. And most of their staffers have little direct experience with the real substance of human intelligence. Many of those who do have intelligence backgrounds worked in necessary but tangential areas of the agency or left the profession with less success than they might have hoped and harbor deep grudges they seek to redress. Congress could significantly improve its assessment of intelligence questions and its relationship with the agency if it hired officers with solid backgrounds and records of having been right.

The CIA, on the other hand, too frequently promotes officers based not on how often they were correct but on other, easily visible factors. Being collegial is more valued than being right. Officers who have served in multiple posts are considered more experienced, regardless of what they accomplished there. Those who brief senior administration officials are likely to get ahead faster than those who work on complicated analytic assessments. Rapid feedback that they were right is rare for CIA officers, just because of the nature of the intelligence product. A promotion system that more often rewards correct answers would benefit the CIA enormously.

Instead, there is little accountability at the agency. Officers with long, known records of bad judgments are too rarely disciplined and too frequently promoted to big jobs. At the same time, a highly qualified, well-respected officer will be "allowed to resign" after shoddy security investigations based on inaccurate assumptions indicate a possible problem.

The CIA does not, despite years of "innovative" programs, sufficiently train its officers to do jobs that are tangential to the basic operational and analytic positions. Briefing Congress, for example. Without systematic training, officers working in liaison with Congress often "manage" staffs and Congress, which is obvious and annoying to them. Better training would certainly improve communication between the agency and the legislators.

  • Print  |
  • Subscribe  |
  • |
  • |
  • Sphere: Related Content

Reader Comments

CIA and divine right congressmen

I find it troubling that Diane Feinstein can expose operators to danger by "ratting them out" in a news conference, a la predator drones flown from inside Pakistan, without fear of prosecution. Her statement was a help to the enemy, elevated the threat level, and was cause for tactical changes. Her actions were clearly intended for selfish purposes, regardless of the "situation in the field". Feinstein should be taken to court as a traitor with capital punishment in the balance.

More knowledge and you can do it!

It weird that the congress does not get that their is backlash with human rights violations. Also that prophet religiuos personn and police officers kids and church families kids are seriously worried about if they are hurt. And a lot demand explanations. And the democrats and some republicans do not want confrontations over un kind laws and zero laws. About life. I like dedicated nice productive christians. So i would help those people. I can not understand why the sanctified or dedicated christians would show up to my street and talk and leave off money or helpful information.(deciphered the HOLY BIBle correctly and hard worker). Gov knows about that one persosn can produce information and cheap cheap help(means a new house or worker). If worried about where money goes, every prophet likes e250 vans. Safe 06-09 Ford e250 vans. Plus you get a 50 ft angel named God that may help you.And other huge angels. CIA could have help. Not everyone hates God. Plus GOD likes his likers. Even if not dedicated. Heated sheep milk(HGH) cures gentic problems. See hardly no one is promoting that.That info is worth over 500,00 million dollars. I think that the FBI has not been stoping corrupt groups,centurion mobsters and anti christ mobs. Such as probably racist and drug cartel and evilists.Now i have quit christianity cause of the mean us gov and ignorant christians. Lets hope dedicated works with the rest of the world. And create christian meccas. God is displeased with hateful mobs.And the world. Jerk azusa ca athletic groups. Served each other. Lovers not sinners? Jerk unproductive christian millionaires. Greedy unhelpful usa businessmen.

What words mean

"CIA has to ensure that Congress is kept fully and currently informed of intelligence activities as well as significant anticipated activity"

Fully means fully, currently means currently and anticipated means anticipated. Unless you live in the looking glass world of the CIA these meanings are clear. At least they are to me or is it that I do not appreciate the "nuances" that allow some folk to escape moral and legal obligations.

I admire the CIA folk, in spite of their seeming ineptitude, because of their dedicated attempts to get anything done amidst the joint fogs of war, politics and spookdom. It recalls the Russian expression, "It is no wonder that the bear dances well. It is a wonder that the bear dances at all."

Add your thoughts

Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

advertisement

Crossword Puzzle

Do You Like Crosswords?

We've added a new feature to our weekly digital magazine: an exclusive crossword puzzle!

advertisement

Cartoon Gallery

Editorial Cartoon

Political Cartoons

Check out our most recent cartoons.

Mary Kate Cary

Mary Kate Cary

The GOP Should Reach Out to Women

The male-dominated party just doesn't understand what women want.

Mort Zuckerman

Mort Zuckerman

The Financial System Needs a Careful Cure

Let the Federal Reserve oversee new regulations for finance giants.

Palin Cartoon Gallery

Editorial Cartoon on Sarah Palin

We've assembled some of the best editorial cartoons on Sarah Palin. Check them out.

Thomas Jefferson St.

Thank You, Bob Dylan

He’s still touring around America like a rolling stone.

GOP Can Be Thankful for Strong Polls

But they cannot get complacent.

5 Reasons for a Democratic Thanksgiving

Michael Steele and healthcare reform top the list.

Women Have Say on Health Reform

If it's the year of the women, why are there so few of them?

Turkey Tax

Uncle Sam is joining in on your Thanksgiving dinner.

Ideological Labels Just Don't Fit

Hard-liners don't understand that some of us don't toe an ideological line.

A Decade in Biased Review

How well does the video sum up the last decade?

Your Photos

President Barack Obama speaks about combat troop level reductions in Iraq as he addresses military personnel at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune.

Obama in Your Town

Has the president visited your town? Send your photos to obamaphotos@usnews.com, and we'll post our favorites online.

Courtesy Greg Meinert

Thousands cheer as Obama becomes the 44th president.

Your Inauguration Photos

Thanks for sending us such great shots from this historic event.


A baby kissing an Obama poster for Washington Whispers.

Your Campaign Photos

We asked to see your personal election pictures and you delivered.

Public Opinion

Should the GOP Have a Litmus Test?

Should the RNC exclude politicians who don't match the party's platform?

advertisement

Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our Terms and Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.
Make USNews.com your home page.