Author Topic: The Right: "Bad Intel" from the Soviet Union's Collapse to Iraqi WMDs  (Read 837 times)

Decker

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The Right’s Marketing Effort to Undermine America

This is from an article by Robert Parry and his analysis of a book by “… former CIA analyst Melvin A. Goodman, Failure of Intelligence: The Decline and Fall of the CIA.”

As a senior Kremlinologist in the CIA’s office of Soviet analysis, Goodman was on the front lines of the information war in the early 1980s when ideological right-wingers took control of the U.S. government under Ronald Reagan and began to gut the key institutions for assessing reality.

A key institution on the Right’s radar scope was the CIA’s analytical division, which was responsible for supplying objective information about the world’s dangers to senior government officials.

However, in the 1970s and early 1980s, CIA analysts were seeing evidence of an accelerating decline in the Soviet Union, especially in its technological capabilities and its economy. Thus, Moscow seemed genuinely interested in détente with the West, especially a winding down of the dangerous and expensive arms race, the analysts concluded.

“A CIA paper warning of the Soviet Union’s impending descent into economic stagnation, ‘Soviet Economic Problems and Prospects,’ was issued in 1977, setting out the reasons why the Soviet economy was in trouble and why its future was so grim,” wrote Goodman in his book.

So, when Reagan captured the White House in 1980, his followers set their sights on purging the CIA’s analytical division of its historical commitment to objectivity, to be replaced by a submissive readiness to deliver politically desirable data.

As Goodman’s book explains in impressive detail, the key action officer for carrying out this reversal of the CIA’s analytical role was a young bureaucrat named Robert Gates, who is now George W. Bush’s Secretary of Defense.

“Bill Casey and Bob Gates guided the first institutionalized ‘cooking of the books’ at the CIA in the 1980s, with a particular emphasis on tailoring intelligence dealing with the Soviet Union, Central America, and Southwest Asia,” Goodman wrote.

“Casey’s first NIE [National Intelligence Estimate] as CIA director, dealing with the Soviet Union and international terrorism, became an exercise in politicization. Casey and Gates pushed this line in order to justify more U.S. covert action in the Third World.”
http://www.consortiumnews.com/Print/2008/040708.html

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War-Horse

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Re: The Right: "Bad Intel" from the Soviet Union's Collapse to Iraqi WMDs
« Reply #1 on: April 09, 2008, 08:52:27 AM »
The Irony is that now the tables have turned.   We're falling and theyre watching..... :-\

Decker

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Re: The Right: "Bad Intel" from the Soviet Union's Collapse to Iraqi WMDs
« Reply #2 on: April 09, 2008, 08:56:25 AM »
The Irony is that now the tables have turned.   We're falling and theyre watching..... :-\
You're right. 

The "Alice in Wonderland" approach to intel is not sustainable.  We are either going to keep feeding the beast and ultimately crash or we are going to go back to the "reality-based" way of doing things preceeding the "Republican Revolution".