Nov. 12, 2008
Top Two Intel Chiefs Expect To Be Replaced
Washington Post: Obama Silent Amid Conflicting Advice Over Whether He Should Keep CIA Head, Director Of National Intelligence
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Officials say Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell, left, and CIA Director Michael V. Hayden both wish to remain on the job in the Obama administration, but a number of influential Democrats want them replaced. President-elect Obama hasn't said anything publicly on the matter. (AP)
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Who's Who Spy Agency Chiefs A glimpse at those who have headed the Central Intelligence Agency since its inception.
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Interactive 21st Century Spying The biggest overhaul of the U.S. intelligence community in half a century.
The nation's top two intelligence officers expect to be replaced by President-elect Barack Obama early in his administration, according to senior intelligence officials.
A number of influential congressional Democrats oppose keeping Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell and CIA Director Michael V. Hayden in their posts because both have publicly supported controversial Bush administration policies on interrogation and telephone surveillance. One Democrat on the Senate intelligence committee said there is a "consensus" view on the matter.
Other Democrats and many intelligence experts, however, give high marks to the current cadre of intelligence leaders, crediting them with restoring stability and professionalism to a community rocked by multiple scandals in recent years. A government official who has closely followed the evolution in the intelligence leadership in recent years argued that it is important to keep at least a few "seasoned" professionals in place during wartime.
Obama transition officials, who have steadfastly declined to discuss the personnel selection process, said yesterday that no decisions have been made regarding intelligence appointments. McConnell and Hayden, both career intelligence professionals, interpret the Obama team not reaching out to them as a sign that they will not be kept on, intelligence officials said.
Both wish to remain on the job, officials say, though neither has said so publicly, and both think that their early departures could be seen as politicizing their offices and setting a precedent for automatic turnover when the White House changes hands. President Bush's decision to retain George J. Tenet, a Clinton appointee, as CIA director was seen inside the agency as a stabilizing move, after the CIA went through five directors in the 10 years following the Iran-contra affair.
The intelligence director and the CIA head are both open-ended appointments. One intelligence official said that McConnell thinks his post should be treated like that of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the president's top military adviser, who serves a fixed two-year term, often extended to an additional two years. A number of chairmen -- such as Gen. Colin L. Powell and Gen. Hugh Shelton -- have spanned the administrations of different political parties.
McConnell, a retired Navy admiral, took over as national intelligence director in February 2007, the second person to hold the office created as part of the 2004 Intelligence Reform Act. Senior intelligence sources said he thinks that the national security apparatus is vulnerable during the first year of an administration as new top intelligence and Pentagon officials await a sometimes-lengthy confirmation process. Last week, McConnell traveled to Chicago to give Obama his first intelligence briefing as president-elect.
Hayden, a retired Air Force general who became CIA head in May 2006, has not been asked to stay, but "has a high regard for the people there, and cares deeply about the mission," an intelligence official said. Officials spoke on the condition of anonymity, citing political and intelligence sensitivities.
Like McConnell, Hayden thinks Obama is "going to have his hands full dealing with what has become a full-blown economic crisis, so he may want to keep some steady, experienced hands at the helm in the national security arena, at least for a while," a Bush administration official said.
John Brennan, head of the Obama intelligence transition team, is one of several names that have surfaced, including Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.), as possible replacements for McConnell or Hayden. Brennan, a former top CIA official who helped establish the National Counterterrorism Center as part of the 2004 reforms, left the agency in 2005 to become chief executive of the Analysis Corp., a Virginia consulting firm with intelligence contracts. He advised the Obama campaign on national security.
Brennan's transition deputy, Jami A. Miscik, was CIA deputy director for intelligence before leaving for Lehman Brothers. Brennan and Miscik rose in the CIA ranks under Tenet and left when he was replaced by former congressman Porter J. Goss (R-Fla.), Hayden's predecessor. Brennan and Miscik were first identified as intelligence transition team leaders by the Wall Street Journal.
Obama voted against Hayden's nomination in the Senate but said that he did so to send a message. "I am voting against Mr. Hayden in the hope that he will be more humble before the great weight of responsibility that he has not only to protect our lives but to protect our democracy," the senator said.
Intelligence operations and budgets increased under the Bush administration. But the intelligence agencies were the subject of much criticism over their failure to anticipate the 2001 al-Qaeda attacks and their erroneous assessments of weapons of mass destruction, which the administration used to justify the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Those concerns led to the 2004 intelligence reforms, which removed the CIA director as head of the 16 U.S. intelligence organizations and established the umbrella Office of the Director of National Intelligence.
Hayden and McConnell were not directly tainted by the controversies over Iraq and the CIA's use of harsh interrogation techniques, such as waterboarding, against terrorism suspects. Both, however, publicly defended the use of "extraordinary" interrogation measures that critics labeled torture.
Hayden, a former head of the National Security Agency, was in charge of the nation's electronic eavesdropping when the White House ordered warrantless surveillance of some U.S.-based communications. McConnell angered some congressional Democrats during a bruising fight over legislation to expand U.S. wiretapping authority.
Much of the pressure for replacing the two men comes from liberal Democrats who argue that a clean break is needed to restore faith in the U.S. intelligence community. Defenders argue that McConnell and Hayden should not be held responsible for policy decisions made by the Bush administration, and that scrutiny seen as politically motivated undermines intelligence morale.
In a Nov. 5 note to the CIA staff, Hayden advised ignoring speculation about personnel changes, saying that "those privileged to lead this organization understand that they serve at the pleasure of the president."
Staff writer Joby Warrick contributed to this report.
By Walter Pincus and Karen DeYoung
© 2008 The Washington Post Company
- Those two look typical southern prison guards. These two ignored laws and authorized illegal wire taps and surveillance of ordinary citizens. Some were tagged because they were openly against Bush policies concerning the environment and the Federal mistreatment of American Indian Treaties.
These two would fit in with Putin''s crowd very well. - Reply to this comment
- Obama''s two intel chiefs:
Ed Ayers: Domestic terror
Osama bin Laden: Foreign terror - Reply to this comment
- The more Republicans talk, the more irrelevant they become.
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- YES WE CAN! YES WE CAN.... destroy America. Lol.
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- C''''''''''''''''mon Obslime-a I dare you to replace them and let them speak freely about what they know.
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Posted by FromTexwLove
Yo bimbette, go post on a site where you actually might know something. McConnell and Hayden can''t talk about specifics of any of their activities; it''s all going to be classified.
Good riddance to both; they are up to their @$$es in rendition and torture, not mention complicity in the illegal wiretapping by NSA. The entire intel community needs fixed at the top level because it''s are stacked with chest-thumping idealogues. - Reply to this comment
- libotards have won so they can now dismantle everything that will keep Americans safe. But just who are they going to blame when they are required to wear a burka? I guess they will just have to ask the imam. But the good part of it all is that when they start whining about religious freedom, the imams will have them beheaded, allah be praised!
Posted by msgtsteve at 02:15 PM : Nov 12, 2008
Still have your Geneva Convention Card ??? - Reply to this comment
- By Mark Pittman, Bob Ivry and Alison Fitzgerald
Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve is refusing to identify the recipients of almost $2 trillion of emergency loans from American taxpayers or the troubled assets the central bank is accepting as collateral.
Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said in September they would comply with congressional demands for transparency in a $700 billion bailout of the banking system. Two months later, as the Fed lends far more than that in separate rescue programs that didn''t require approval by Congress, Americans have no idea where their money is going or what securities the banks are pledging in return. - Reply to this comment
- Can you feel the Republican hate on this thread? These hateful people are the same ones that took off their KKK hoods so they could cheer at the next Grand Master Palin.
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Posted by yongamerica
But you''re full of love...right? Knock it off...pot calling the kettle black... - Reply to this comment
- By Mark Pittman, Bob Ivry and Alison Fitzgerald
Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve is refusing to identify the recipients of almost $2 trillion of emergency loans from American taxpayers or the troubled assets the central bank is accepting as collateral.
Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said in September they would comply with congressional demands for transparency in a $700 billion bailout of the banking system. Two months later, as the Fed lends far more than that in separate rescue programs that didn''t require approval by Congress, Americans have no idea where their money is going or what securities the banks are pledging in return. - Reply to this comment
- Can you feel the Republican hate on this thread? These hateful people are the same ones that took off their KKK hoods so they could cheer at the next Grand Master Palin.
- Reply to this comment
- Hey Slownewsday/daze, pulled another one of your nic names out of your arse did ya? When are you going to get the balls to use just one of them?
I know! NEVER! Because you''''re a slime bucket pimp ho!
Posted by FromTexwLove
Wrong, try again - this is my only name.
Surprised that more than one poster thinks you are full of *****?
Don''t be. - Reply to this comment
- Regardless of who Obama replaces them with, they won''t be anything like these two torturous lying pieces of scum.
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- The fact that Bush put them both in office was highly politicizing. First they had to find a bunch of yes men, who would cowtow to Bush''s policies regardless of the policies moral or legal foundations.
- Reply to this comment
- C''''mon Obslime-a I dare you to replace them and let them speak freely about what they know.
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Posted by FromTexwLove
Hey Texass, don%u2019t you have a Village Idiot in the White House you need to be rounding up and herding home? - Reply to this comment
- They should all be replaced since none of them have been able to find Osama Bin Forgotten after eight years.
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- He will replace them with the reverand jessie and al sharpton although oprah was high on the list!!
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- By Mark Pittman, Bob Ivry and Alison Fitzgerald
Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve is refusing to identify the recipients of almost $2 trillion of emergency loans from American taxpayers or the troubled assets the central bank is accepting as collateral.
Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said in September they would comply with congressional demands for transparency in a $700 billion bailout of the banking system. Two months later, as the Fed lends far more than that in separate rescue programs that didn''t require approval by Congress, Americans have no idea where their money is going or what securities the banks are pledging in return. - Reply to this comment
- Every Bush appointee needs to be broomed. Better yet, fumigate!
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- It`s a good thing Hayden remained on active duty while he operated a "civilian" agency... with luck, Obama will fire him twice!
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- gscotth, we won and we dont need your republicans around anymore.
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