CIA Director Forced Out
Porter Goss Resigns Amid Turmoil, Air Force Gen. Expected To Head CIA
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Play CBS Video Video Air Force Gen. New CIA Chief? Air Force General Michael Hayden reportedly tops the short list to replace Porter Goss as CIA director. As Jim Axelrod reports, Goss suddenly resigned after less than two years on the job.
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Video Surprise CIA Shakeup Less than two years after he took the job, Peter Goss abruptly resigned as director of the CIA. Jim Axelrod reports.
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Video New Direction For The CIA? Steve Kroft sat down with former CIA analyst Michael Scheuer to discuss Peter Goss' resignation from the agency.
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President Bush, right, announces that CIA Director Porter Goss, left, will be resigining in a statement in the Oval Office of the White House, Friday, May 5, 2006 in Washington. (AP)
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President Bush announced that Porter Goss resigned from his position leading the CIA, Friday, May 5, 2006. (CBS)
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CIA Director Porter Goss, testifies before the U.S. Select Committee on Intelligence in February, 2006. (AP)
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CIA spokesman Paul Gimigliano said Goss' resignation also was not related to the recent firing of a CIA officer the director said had unauthorized contacts with the press, a firing that found support within the agency and the White House.
Goss was scheduled to deliver a commencement speech Saturday at Ohio's Tiffin University, one of a growing number of schools to offer national security studies programs.
Goss spent 40 years in federal and local government, including 16 years as a congressman and 10 years as a CIA operative in the 1960s and '70s. He stepped down as the agency's director after 19 tumultuous months, as the agency struggled to forge a new identity in an era of government overhauls stemming from Sept. 11 and the flawed prewar intelligence on Iraq.
He offered little publicly to explain his decision.
"CIA remains the gold standard," he said in a statement. "When I came to CIA in September of 2004, I wanted to accomplish some very specific things, and we have made great strides on all fronts."
But the agency, like the Bush administration, has been far from peaceful. Goss' departure was the White House's third major personnel move in just over a month, aimed at reinvigorating President Bush's second term.
But CBS News consultant Michael Scheuer, a former CIA analyst, said that Goss’ abrupt departure will do more harm than good at an agency already hampered by rapid turnover.
"Goss at least was a sign of stability and now that's gone," said Scheuer. "The American intelligence community is in a terrible state of disarray at the moment, much weaker than it was on 9-11."
Goss’ resignation, says Scheuer, "is just another problem that American security as a whole did not need."
Knowledgeable Republicans said Friday night that Hayden was thought to top Mr. Bush's short list of candidates to replace Goss. Among others mentioned were Bush's homeland security adviser, Frances Fragos Townsend; David Shedd, Negroponte's chief of staff; and Mary Margaret Graham, Negroponte's deputy for intelligence collection.
Mr. Bush nominated Goss in 2004, in the midst of a re-election campaign that was riddled with accusations about the botched prewar intelligence on Iraq. Mr. Bush said he would rely on the advice of Goss on the sensitive issue of intelligence reform.
Goss, 67, the former chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, came under fire almost immediately, in part because he brought with him several top aides from Congress who were considered highly political for the CIA. They developed particularly poor relations with segments of the agency's clandestine service.
By December, Congress passed the most sweeping intelligence overhaul in 50 years. One result: The CIA that took pride in being the premier element of the spy community found itself relegated to a crowded second tier of 15 other agencies.
Hayden, the highest ranking military intelligence officer, has been brought into management challenges before. In 1999, he was tapped to shake up the National Security Agency, as the Internet and new communications tools were frustrating the agency's eavesdroppers.
With a Hayden nomination, Democrats would be sure to seize on his intimate connection to Mr. Bush's anti-terrorist surveillance program, which has drawn the ire of even some Republicans.
Bush aides have been looking for ways to rescue his presidency from sagging poll ratings and difficulties with the Iraq war and his agenda in Congress.
The shake-up began with the resignation of Andrew Card as chief of staff and his replacement by Joshua Bolten. Other changes have included the replacement of press secretary Scott McClellan with Fox News commentator Tony Snow.
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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