HOME
DV NEWS
SERVICE ARCHIVE SUBMISSIONS/CONTACT ABOUT DV
Hall
of Mirrors
by
John Chuckman
June
18, 2003
Perhaps
you remember the "fun houses" that were once part of old big-city
amusement parks? They were filled with mazes, frights, and surprises. Often,
these included a hall of mirrors, a maze of rooms walled with mirrored doors.
The confusion of reflections made the maze seem infinitely more complex than it
actually was.
The
relationship between political leaders and intelligence institutions is a great
deal like a hall of mirrors. Looked at from a perspective above, a perspective
not permitted most people, the maze may be fairly simple, but it is designed so
that any individual trying to make his or her way through it is confused and
set off balance.
It
is unsettling, though not unexpected, to see the press in America and in the UK
lost in the maze, looking for the failures of intelligence that gave us a
needless war over non-existent weapons. One has no certain way of knowing
whether reporters are just playing a game that continues supporting what their
publications supported before the war or whether they are honestly lost, but a
reasonable working assumption in all such matters is that they are playing a
game.
This
business is not limited to the mainstream press. There are scores of articles
on the Internet's alternative-news sites covering the same subject. In this
case, one feels inclined to believe that much of it reflects real bafflement,
since it so difficult to understand why they, too, should play the game.
These
articles are dangerous to people's understanding of how government at the
highest level actually works, and they effectively relieve the responsible
parties, President Bush and Tony Blair, of their responsibility.
There
is always a pretense about intelligence agencies being independent sources of
information, high-court judges, incorruptible priests, cloistered academics
dedicated to a country's interests, influenced only by the reliability of the
information they gather, sift, and sort. The CIA was baptized under President
Truman with buckets of such swill.
My
favorite historical example of how silly this view is concerns the famous
Cambridge spies. The Soviets were amazingly successful in the 1930s in
recruiting highly-intelligent, idealistic, and well-connected young Englishmen
who would one day rise to positions of authority in the British establishment.
Perhaps no more complete penetration of an opponent's intelligence service ever
took place.
Stalin,
with the purges of the 1930s, was convinced that there was a vast Western
conspiracy against the Soviet Union, and Soviet intelligence made great efforts
trying to support his notion. The precious time and effort of the Cambridge
spies was wasted looking for what did not exist, they themselves came under
suspicion as plants, and their talented handlers in some cases lost their lives
at least in part for not finding evidence of the plot. Later, under the
pressure of war with Germany, the situation changed and information provided by
these spies was immensely helpful on the Russian front.
The
whim of a leader had for a time intimidated many very clever and experienced
people in Soviet intelligence from defending what they knew was the truth of
their success - that is, that they had placed almost a set of high-resolution
cameras well positioned in important offices of the British government.
Power
is power, regardless of how it is conferred, whether elected or not. When an
American President wants something produced or an attitude assumed by the
intelligence services, intellectual integrity and notions of independence soon
melt in the furnace of his wishes. After all, he appoints senior intelligence
officials. He can decide to a considerable extent whether their day-to-day work
is even regarded as worthwhile and useful. He also has a great deal to say
about funding. It is impossible for a director of intelligence to long resist a
President's demands without being put in an untenable position: the appointed
official of a secretive organization unresponsive to the elected President of a
democratic society.
Of
course, these demands generally are not given as direct orders. They are
communicated in intricate and subtle ways. After all, when the CIA assassinates
or attempts to assassinate foreign leaders or attempts to destabilize foreign
governments, it cannot do this without approval at the highest level, yet no
President wants letters on White House stationery directing such unethical
activities to end up on display at the national archives.
We
can assume, always, with events holding the world's attention, as with the
run-up to the invasion of Iraq, that the White House orders support for the
arguments it wants to make. Of course, generally, a President will not demand
nor will the intelligence people produce material that is immediately absurd or
embarrassingly inaccurate. It's up to all those clever people with unlimited
resources to provide something suitable, something that only detailed study
might reveal as faulty.
After
all, intelligence is an assembly of many bits of information, and these always
necessarily contain ambiguities and gray areas. Sifting and weighting raw
information to present a coherent picture is a prime responsibility for an
agency like the CIA, since trainloads of raw intelligence from many sources is
useless to decision-makers - that's part of what the "central" in the
agency's name implies.
So
one only has to give some bits a new emphasis or weight to make a case that
would not otherwise have been made. Such adjusting of weights later can be
defended as resembling one alternate scenario of a corporate plan (e.g., the
unexpectedly high or low cases for oil prices). The dishonesty will be clear
only to those who understand that the official view already has alternate
scenarios, but with the sacred robe of national security casting its long
shadow, few close questions can be expected.
The
pure collection of information is often an inseparable part of other
clandestine activities in an intelligence agency anyway, including misleading
or destroying those regarded as opponents. Creating information for domestic
consumption is an easy, perhaps almost unavoidable at times, part of this work.
Despite the solemn atmosphere of honorable service cultivated at CIA
headquarters, great energy and resources have always gone into nasty and brutish
work - everything from paying off favored foreign leaders, counterfeiting
currencies, and secretly supplying weapons to corrupting foreign elections and
planting false information abroad.
The
agency grew out of America's OSS of World War Two whose leaders and activities
were free-wheeling, manic, often comically adventurous, and even absurd. Read
the part of Gordon Liddy's book that has Liddy and ex-CIA agent Howard Hunt
(members of Nixon's "plumbers") hiding for hours in a bar, peeing
into partly-empty liquor bottles, amusing themselves with thoughts of patrons
next day drinking the stuff. The book is valuable only for revealing more about
the psychology of such people than the author may have intended. An older man I
knew in Chicago, dead now, a former submariner, once described the people they
sometimes had to deliver to places like Cuba - they were, he said, not the kind
of people he would even want aboard his boat if it were up to him.
I
mention these anecdotes only because it is important to appreciate the nature
of much of the work of an agency like the CIA, work that unquestionably colors
its ethics and thinking. It is not the cool, cerebral, above-the-fray campus of
academics portrayed in Washington. I think Americans should never forget that
it was a former CIA Director, William Colby, in striped school tie with crisp,
educated voice, who tattled about a program for the organized murder of twenty
thousand civilians in Vietnam, Operation Phoenix, and he knew what he was
talking about because he was the one who ran the program.
But
as certain people in America are so fond of saying, you don't blame the gun,
you blame the shooter.
John Chuckman lives in Canada and is
former chief economist for a large Canadian oil company. He writes frequently
for Yellow Times.org and other publications.