Friday, Sept. 2, 2005 11:00 a.m. EDT
Former CIA Director Tenet Threatens Disclosures?
http://newsmax.com/archives/ic/2005/9/2/110832.shtml
Former CIA director George Tenet, said to be the
target of what the Washington Times called "a
scathing report by Inspector General John
Helgerson - may go public with embarrassing
disclosures about the Bush administration and
its actions leading up to Sept. 11, 2001.
The CIA report, prepared as the result of a
17-month investigation by a team of 11 CIA
officials, blames Tenet and several top CIA
officials for its failure pre-9/11 to deal with
al-Qaida.
But former Reagan White House aide and
intelligence expert John B. Roberts II, quoting
an anonymous source close to Tenet, wrote in
Thursday's Washington Times that the former
chief spook has no intention of taking it lying
down.
The report, delivered to Congress this week,
recommends punitive sanctions against Tenet,
former Deputy Director of Operations James L.
Pavitt and former counter-terrorist center head
J. Cofer Black.
Roberts writes, "George Tenet is not going to
let himself become the fall guy for the
September 11th intelligence failures, according
to a former intelligence officer and a source
friendly to Mr. Tenet.
In retaliation, Roberts says that Tenet may turn
the tables and put the blame on President Bush.
Tenet, he claims, has already written a fiery,
20-page, "tightly knitted rebuttal to the
Inspector General's report. But Tenet's response
has been marked "classified," in contrast to
usual CIA practice. Also unavailable to the
public is the report itself.
Roberts says Tenet's decision to strike back
could be very bad news for the President.
Wrote Roberts, "Mr. Tenet's decision to defend
himself against the charges in the report poses
a potential crisis for the White House.
"According to a former clandestine services
officer, the former CIA director turned down a
publisher's $4.5 million book offer because he
didn't want to embarrass the White House by
rehashing the failure to prevent September 11
and the flawed intelligence on Iraq's weapons of
mass destruction.
Quoting a "knowledgeable source, Roberts wrote
that Tenet "had a wink and a nod understanding
with the White House that he wouldn't be
scapegoated for intelligence failings.
Roberts claims a "deal" was made between Tenet
and Bush, one that was sealed with the
President's award of the Presidential Freedom
Medal to the former CIA head.
In his rebuttal, Tenet, Roberts warns, "treads
perilously close to affirming the account of
Richard Clarke, the former NSC terrorism
official who claimed the Bush administration's
had delayed adopting a strategy against al-Qaida."
Current CIA Director Porter Goss is between a
rock and a hard place, according to Roberts, who
explains that Goss will be criticized for
covering up if he does nothing. But if he
follows the IG's recommendation to convene
formal hearings as a prelude to sanctions, Tenet
himself may go public to defend his reputation
by damaging the President and his
administration.
Roberts concludes: "The $4.5 million book offer
may soon be back on the table, and this time Mr.
Tenet might take it.
============================
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Friday, September 2, 2005 Last updated
11:38 a.m. PT
Mystery unfolds over hunt for WMD in Iraq
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,1280,-5251616,00.html
By CHARLES J. HANLEY
AP SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT