Covert action operations to remain in CIA's control
Washington Times, DC - Oct 13, 2005
... back to the president that [covert action] stay ...
a National Security Branch dedicated to domestic spying,
and ... senior intelligence official said the CIA is
still ...
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‘Cheney cabal hijacked US foreign policy’
By Edward Alden in Washington
Published: October 20 2005

Vice-President Dick Cheney and a handful of others had
hijacked the government's foreign policy apparatus,
deciding in secret to carry out policies that had left
the US weaker and more isolated in the world, the top
aide to former Secretary of State Colin Powell claimed
on Wednesday.
In a scathing attack on the record of President George
W. Bush, Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, chief of staff to
Mr Powell until last January, said: “What I saw was a
cabal between the vice-president of the United States,
Richard Cheney, and the secretary of defense, Donald
Rumsfeld, on critical issues that made decisions that
the bureaucracy did not know were being made.
“Now it is paying the consequences of making those
decisions in secret, but far more telling to me is
America is paying the consequences.”
Transcript: Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson
Click here
http://news.ft.com/cms/s/c925a686-40f4-11da-b3f9-00000e2511c8.html
Mr Wilkerson said such secret decision-making was
responsible for mistakes such as the long refusal to
engage with North Korea or to back European efforts on
Iran.
It also resulted in bitter battles in the administration
among those excluded from the decisions.
“If you're not prepared to stop the feuding elements in
the bureaucracy as they carry out your decisions, you
are courting disaster. And I would say that we have
courted disaster in Iraq, in North Korea, in Iran.”
The comments, made at the New America Foundation, a
Washington think-tank, were the harshest attack on the
administration by a former senior official since
criticisms by Richard Clarke, former White House
terrorism czar, and Paul O'Neill, former Treasury
secretary, early last year.
Mr Wilkerson said his decision to go public had led to a
personal falling out with Mr Powell, whom he served for
16 years at the Pentagon and the State Department.
“He's not happy with my speaking out because, and I
admire this in him, he is the world's most loyal
soldier."
Among his other charges:
■ The detainee abuse at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere was “a
concrete example” of the decision-making problem, with
the president and other top officials in effect giving
the green light to soldiers to abuse detainees. “You
don't have this kind of pervasive attitude out there
unless you've condoned it.”
■ Condoleezza Rice, the former national security adviser
and now secretary of state, was “part of the problem”.
Instead of ensuring that Mr Bush received the best
possible advice, “she would side with the president to
build her intimacy with the president”.
■ The military, particularly the army and marine corps,
is overstretched and demoralised. Officers, Mr Wilkerson
claimed, “start voting with their feet, as they did in
Vietnam. . . and all of a sudden your military begins to
unravel”.
Mr Wilkerson said former president George H.W. Bush “one
of the finest presidents we have ever had” understood
how to make foreign policy work. In contrast, he said,
his son was “not versed in international relations and
not too much interested in them either”.
“There's a vast difference between the way George H.W.
Bush dealt with major challenges, some of the greatest
challenges at the end of the 20th century, and effected
positive results in my view, and the way we conduct
diplomacy today.”
http://www.newamerica.net
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