John
Negroponte as National Intelligence Czar:
John Negroponte as National Intelligence Czar: There is major difference
between being an effective instrument of bad U.S. policy and providing good
intelligence for good policymaking.

Right Web Analysis John Negroponte—Policy Hack or Intelligence Reformer
http://rightweb.irc-online.org/analysis/2005/0503negroponte.php
The CIA has long been caught in the crossfire from the left and the right.
Human rights critics and left-center internationalists have charged that the
CIA has engineered coups and trained paramilitary units. On its right flank,
the agency has been accused by militarists, old guard conservatives, and
neoconservatives of dangerously underestimating threats to U.S. national
security and of being permeated with liberals, Arabists, and socialists.
The CIA has also faced fire from forces inside government that have been
critical of the CIA’s “threat assessments” and “national intelligence
estimates”—including militarists in Congress and the Pentagon, other
intelligence agencies such as the National Reconnaissance Office, and even
the President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (PFIAB). Hawks inside
and outside the administration have, since the late 1940s, teamed up in
campaigns to emasculate, sideline, and control the CIA.
At the start of the second Bush administration, hawks—in Congress, the
neocon think tanks, and the Pentagon—can point to two major achievements in
their campaign to seize command of the government’s intelligence apparatus.
First was the appointment of Porter Goss (R-FL), the former chairman of the
House Intelligence Committee and a longtime ally of Vice President Cheney,
to head the CIA and direct its reform. Second was the nomination of John
Negroponte to be the first Director of National Intelligence (DNI).
The Negroponte appointment, preceded by that of Goss, signaled the end of
the CIA’s dominant position among the government’s 15 intelligence agencies.
A diplomat with a four-decade history as a ruthless and highly effective
foreign policy operative, Negroponte has most recently served as the
ambassador to Iraq. Negroponte, who received quick Senate confirmation for
his positions in Iraq and at the UN, can count on bipartisan support for his
latest nomination.
Announcing the nomination on February 17 th, President Bush said that
Negroponte will be the official who ensures that “our intelligence officials
work as a single, unified enterprise.” As a result of the Intelligence
Reform and Terrorist Prevention Act passed by Congress in late 2004, the
newly created office of DNI—with a staff of 500—will exercise oversight over
the budgets of the diverse intelligence agencies.
CIA’s Skeleton
The appointment of Negroponte brings to an end the 58-year history of the
Director of Central Intelligence (DCI) as the presumed top intelligence
chief. Since the creation of the CIA at the onset of the Cold War, the
authority of the DCI has been unclear. The chief of the CIA has also been
the government’s central intelligence director.
Only on rare occasions (notably during Allen Dulles’ tenure from 1953-61)
has the DCI exercised control over the Pentagon’s intelligence agencies. The
authority of most CIA chiefs hasn’t extended beyond the CIA itself, although
the CIA director has—as DCI—been responsible for providing the president
with his Daily Intelligence Briefing.
The DNI is the director of all intelligence offices, including the CIA and
those under the purview of the State Department and Defense Department.
According to the president, Negroponte in his new position will “report
directly to me” and “will make our intelligence efforts better coordinated,
more efficient, and more effective.”
Creating a unified and efficient intelligence apparatus will be a major
challenge given the turf wars that proliferated during the Bush’s first
term.
These interagency disputes ranged from the creation of new intelligence
operations tightly controlled by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld (and
other ideological allies among the civilian leadership at the Pentagon,
including Stephen Cambone, Paul Wolfowitz, and Douglas Feith), to the
sidelining of the State Department and the CIA by the Pentagon, White House,
and Vice President’s Office, and the alliance between congressional hawks
and the Pentagon to successfully modify the intelligence reform bill so as
to reduce the power of the DNI over the Pentagon.
Negroponte’s deputy will be Lieutenant General Michael Hayden, who directs
the Pentagon’s National Security Agency—which is dedicated to satellite and
other high-tech espionage. The Pentagon controls 80% of the U.S.
government’s intelligence budget, which is estimated to exceed $40 billion
annually.
Presumably, Hayden’s new position at the DNI office will result in a further
downsizing—and perhaps collapse—of the CIA’s own science and technology
division. As an active-duty officer, Air Force Lt. Gen. Hayden will
presumably help Negroponte ease the tensions that have kept the armed
forces, the Pentagon’s civilian leadership, and the State Department at odds
with one another, especially over Iraq policy.
Negroponte’s appointment came on the heels of Rumsfeld’s announcement that
the Pentagon will allow the military to organize highly classified squads to
collect intelligence overseas. The DOD will also use its newly gained
congressional authority to recruit foreign agents in the field, thereby
eroding the CIA’s own authority over human intelligence operations.
The appointment of Negroponte as DNI comes at a time when new CIA chief Goss
has signaled that he intends to rid the agency of those who do not fall into
line with Bush administration policies in the Middle East and elsewhere,
leading some high officials to leave the agency and to widespread morale
problems. In the view of one former intelligence official, “The CIA is a
wounded gazelle on the African plain. It’s a pile of bleached bones.”
Negroponte Not a Neocon
Negroponte is not an ideologue, and certainly not a neoconservative. Since
the 1960s Ambassador Negroponte has earned a reputation as a ruthless and
determined political operative who always gets the job done—however “dirty”
or undiplomatic. Unlike most of President Bush’s foreign policy team,
Negroponte has no direct connections with the network of conservative policy
institutes, think tanks, or foundations that have set the administration’s
foreign and domestic policy agenda.
Not a theorist or strategist, Negroponte instead is commonly regarded as a
pragmatic realist with decidedly hawkish inclinations. Negroponte has
throughout his career maintained a low public profile despite his
high-profile positions—rarely writing or speaking about U.S. foreign or
military policy, apart from diplomatically worded statements issued by his
office. Ever the flexible diplomat, Negroponte has proved comfortable in
adopting whatever foreign policy language—from idealist to realist—is deemed
most appropriate and effective for the job he has been assigned.
Negroponte, 65, comes well prepared to his new position, after having served
as a junior officer in Vietnam during the war, and as ambassador to the
Philippines, Honduras, Mexico, the United Nations, and most recently Iraq.
Over the past four decades, Negroponte has moved around the globe doing
whatever is required to further what successive U.S. administrations have
defined as U.S. economic interests and national security—including such
diverse roles as advising the puppet U.S. government in South Vietnam during
the war, supervising the Reagan administration use of Honduras as its
logistical center for the counterinsurgency and counterrevolutionary
campaigns in Central America, ensuring good U.S.-Mexico relations during the
NAFTA negotiations, managing relations with UN Security Council members in
the lead-up to the invasion of Iraq, and overseeing U.S. nation-building and
counterinsurgency operations in the lead-up to the Iraq elections in January
2005.
Tough Yes, But Independent?
Negroponte comes to the new position with many assets, including his wide
experience and his many accomplishments in implementing diverse U.S. foreign
and military policy strategies. There is, however, a major difference
between being an effective instrument of bad U.S. policy and providing good
intelligence for good policymaking.
Critics charge that Negroponte has—both as a member of the National Security
Council and during his various ambassadorships—covered up damaging
information so as to further bad policies. Melvin Goodman, a former CIA
official, warned: “Negroponte is tough enough. The question is: Is he
independent enough?” Referring to his history of covering up human rights
abuses in Honduras , Goodman said: “I think of the role of intelligence in
telling truth to power” and then Negroponte’s appointment “doesn’t fit.”
The potential power of the new intelligence czar will likely be determined
by how well he works with the inner circle of the foreign policy team. This
team—led by Vice President Cheney, DOD Secretary Rumsfeld, and Deputy DOD
Secretary Wolfowitz—dominated the national security, foreign policy, and
intelligence policies of the first Bush administration.
If Negroponte attempts to assert his independence, he may face strong
opposition that could undermine the potential power of the DNI’s office and
weaken his influence over and access to the president. In close
collaboration with its congressional allies, the Pentagon successfully
blocked the original intelligence reform bill that would have given the DNI
complete control over the budgets and personnel of military intelligence
agencies.
One sign of the power of the new DNI office will be Negroponte’s ability to
assert control over the budgets and directors of the various intelligence
agencies, particularly those that reside within the Pentagon and the rump
intelligence operations created by Rumsfeld and associates.
But it will be his independence as an arbiter of good intelligence, not his
ability to assert power over the policy process, that will determine if
Negroponte is really a director of national intelligence—or instead just
another policy hack turning out daily intelligence briefings and national
intelligence estimates that serve predetermined policy agendas.
Tom Barry is policy director of the International Relations Center (IRC),
online at www.irc-online.org. He has written numerous books about U.S.
foreign policy, including about U.S.-Central American relations. For more
information on Negroponte, see the IRC’s Right Web profile at:
http://rightweb.irc-online.org/ind/negroponte/negroponte.php.
Published by the Right Web Program at the International Relations Center
(IRC). ©2005. All rights reserved.
Recommended citation:
Tom Barry, “John Negroponte—Policy Hack or Intelligence Reformer?,” IRC
Right Web (Silver City, NM: International Relations Center, March 1, 2005).
Web location:
http://rightweb.irc-online.org/analysis/2005/0503negroponte.php
Production information:
Writer: Tom Barry, IRC
Layout: Tonya Cannariato, IRC
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John Dimitri Negroponte

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John Negroponte - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
... embassy's annual human rights report did not contain the full story. The
question of what John Negroponte knew about human rights abuses in Honduras
will probably never be answered definitively, but ..
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