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CIA's History of Lying to Congress

by: Lisa Pease  |  Consortium News

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Central Intelligence Agency director Leon Panetta finds himself in the middle of a long-running battle between the CIA and Congress. (Photo: AP)

    On TV this week, with a measure of disbelief in their voices, the pundits ask, did the CIA lie to or deliberately mislead Congress? How is that not a rhetorical question?

    The Agency has a long history of manipulating Congress and others to support its programs. That this was posed as an actual question reveals the media’s historical illiteracy in this matter.

    In fact, when a House select committee investigated the CIA in the 1970s, the CIA convinced the House to suppress its own report, begging the question of who was overseeing whom. Nevertheless, a copy of the House report was leaked, via Daniel Schorr, to the Village Voice. The report opened with this disturbing sentence:

    â€œIf this Committee’s recent experience is any test, intelligence agencies that are to be controlled by Congressional lawmaking are, today, beyond the lawmakers’ scrutiny.”

    In the wake of revelations that CIA Director Leon Panetta just recently learned of an eight-year CIA operation that had never been revealed to, much less approved by, Congress, Reps. Anna Eshoo, D-California, and Rush Holt, D-New Jersey, echoed similar sentiments.

    On Andrea Mitchell’s show on MSNBC Thursday, Eshoo and Holt stated that Panetta’s revelation challenged his earlier statement that the CIA did not mislead Congress.

    Eshoo made clear that, contrary to accusations from some Republicans, the charge has nothing to do with protecting House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who earlier claimed the CIA lied to and misled Congress regarding its use of waterboarding and other brutal interrogation methods.

    â€œThis isn’t anything personal,” Eshoo said emphatically. “This is strictly about business, and this is deadly serious business, if I might characterize it that way.

    â€œThe issue here is the national security of our nation. There are very few members of Congress that [sic] are chosen to serve on the House Intelligence Committee. And in that role, we are reliant upon the intelligence community to inform us – in fact, they are obligated, under the National Security Act of 1947 – to fully and completely inform the Congress.

    â€œSo this is about accountability. If in fact we do not get the proper information, how can we conduct our oversight which we are responsible for in the oath that we take, as well as shaping policy based on that information?”

    Rep. Rush Holt focused the key issue for Andrea Mitchell:

    â€œA moment ago, [you] said the relationship between Speaker Pelosi and Director Panetta and who told what [to] whom when is the bigger issue. No, that’s the smaller issue. The bigger issue is, how well-examined are the activities of the CIA? Is the CIA doing things that are not in the best national interest? Who knows, if you don’t have the oversight and the examination? So that’s what this is about.”

    As the only full-scale House investigation focused on the CIA – the one led by Rep. Otis Pike in the mid-1970s determined – overseeing the CIA is a challenging task, at best, and one at which government had repeatedly failed.

    Painful Knowledge

    Author Kathryn Olmstead explored the failure of government to properly oversee the Agency in her book Challenging the Secret Government and found three culprits:

    First, the House and Senate were unwilling to challenge the CIA on policy, whether from fear, support, or sheer laziness.

    Second, Olmstead believes the press, which seemed hell-bent on exposing the excesses of covert action in the wake of Watergate, pulled back for fear reporters had gone too far in bringing down President Richard Nixon. (Olmstead notes only in passing CIA’s longstanding relationships with the media, so well detailed in Carl Bernstein’s landmark article “The CIA and the Media,” published in Rolling Stone in 1977.)

    But Olmstead really hits the mark with her third point, criticism of the American people for turning a blind eye to the excesses of the National Security State.

    â€œ[T]he American people, acculturated for years to view their country and their leaders as moral and democratic, were reluctant to acknowledge unpleasant truths about their secret agencies, Olmstead wrote. "[A]s William W. Keller has explained in ‘The Liberals and J. Edgar Hoover,’ the liberal state did not like to admit that it had violated its ideology in any way.

    â€œTherefore, the extensive powers of its clandestine agencies were kept secret. This secrecy enabled Americans to assume that the nation’s foreign policy goals were compatible with traditional American ideals.

    â€œBut the intelligence investigations brought these secret powers into the open; they forced American to acknowledge that their country had tried to kill foreign leaders, had spied on civil rights leaders, and had tested drugs on innocent people.

    â€œBecause this knowledge was very painful, many Americans, including members of Congress, refused to accept it. Secrecy, as journalist Taylor Branch has said, ‘protects the American people from grisly facts at variance with their self-image.’”

    Deceiving Congress

    If we study history, we’ll find rather quickly that the CIA has repeatedly, systematically, misled Congress.

    Miles Copeland, one of the founding fathers of the CIA, talked of the use of “Byzantine intrigues” designed to keep Congress off its back.

    Tom Braden noted that CIA Director Allen Dulles and CIA counterintelligence chief James Angleton used to discuss each morning, in the guise of fishing talk, the “take” from the night before, i.e., intelligence gathered on prominent denizens of Capitol Hill from CIA taps sprinkled throughout the community.

    (Braden, who died recently, is famously cited for writing an article titled “Why I’m Glad the CIA is Immoral.” Few commentators note that, in a later article, penned in the wake of disclosures about the Agency’s wrongdoings, Braden advocated the abolition of the CIA.)

    Angleton said at one point that if the CIA couldn’t find out its own future from tapping the Hill, it had no business being in intelligence.

    It should go without saying that “gossip” could easily become blackmail material, especially where illicit sexual liaisons were involved.

    E. Howard Hunt, the notorious figure who at the time of Watergate was on his ostensible third retirement from the CIA, described how, during the 1960s, he penned a series of spy novels to aid the CIA, but “quit” the agency when his pen name became linked to his real name.

    After he “quit,” he was instantly rehired as a contract agent, answerable solely to the CIA director’s deputy Thomas Karamessines. In his own words, Hunt explained he did this as a “cautionary” move “in the event some Congressman might raise a question.” In other words, he “quit” to hide a CIA media operation from congressional scrutiny.

    Lying about the Castro Plots

    And nowhere is the CIA’s deception and independent action more evident than in the Castro assassination plots.

    When Congress first got a whiff of these plots thanks to a couple of articles by Jack Anderson and others, what did the CIA tell Congress?

    â€œ[W]ith the exception of one case which is under review by the Committee staff, there is no substance to the charges that CIA directed agents to assassinate Castro.” (Letter from Walter Elder to the Staff Director of the Church Committee, dated Aug. 21, 1975.)

    As both Elder and the Church Committee later learned, the CIA of course had directed numerous agents to assassinate Castro in a variety of ways. But, the CIA suggested publicly, they were acting under presidential authority.

    Privately, however, according to the CIA’s own Inspector General Report, the CIA never informed President John F. Kennedy of the Phase I Castro plots until they had ended, and never informed Kennedy of the ongoing Phase II plots at all.

    In its own report, the CIA asks itself, can we claim executive approval for these plots, and answers its own question, “No.” (This report was not declassified until the late 1990s, and should be considered the final word on the subject.)

    The legacy of the investigations of the CIA in the 1970s was the perception, though not the reality, that effective CIA oversight had been implemented.

    We’re now seeing that, in reality, almost nothing changed. The troubling insights of the committees that investigated the CIA were all but forgotten. No one went to jail for breaking laws or committing perjury.

    (In 1977, former CIA Director Richard Helms was convicted of misleading Congress about the Nixon administration’s covert action to oust Chile’s socialist President Salvador Allende, who died in a 1973 coup. Helms received a two-year suspended sentence and a $2,000 fine, which was paid by friends at the CIA. Until his death in 2002, Helms wore the conviction as a badge of honor, and President Ronald Reagan awarded him the National Security Medal in 1983.)

    (In the 1980s, CIA Director William J. Casey delighted in mumbling through his congressional testimony making it nearly impossible for the Intelligence Committee members to understand what he was saying or grasp its import. When the deceptions of the Iran-Contra Affair were exposed in 1986, Casey was accused of misleading Congress but died in May 1987 before any legal action could be taken. Three other implicated CIA officers were pardoned by President George H.W. Bush on Christmas Eve 1992.)

    While both the Senate and House have intelligence oversight committees, the CIA is always in control of what Congress knows about its operations, as we were reminded again on Thursday. How can that be changed? Who has the political will to demand true openness?

    It appears that President Obama has no desire to demand any change in the current system of intelligence community oversight. That’s unfortunate, and dangerous to our Democracy.

    How can there be consent of the governed, as our Constitution demands, if the governed, or at least, their representatives, have no knowledge of what they are consenting to?

    Should we then demand a new investigation of the intelligence communities? Of course we should, and regularly. But we should also do so with a genuine desire for change.

    We shouldn’t spend the time and money unless there’s a determination to get to the truth and follow through on lessons learned. We shouldn’t start unless we have the stomach to face our past with a view towards protecting our future.

    We elect our leaders. We have chosen whom we want to entrust with our secrets. How dare the CIA decide our representatives are unworthy of our trust and keep secrets from them? Is this a government of the people, by the people, and for the people? Or do we live under a government run by covert operators for purposes undisclosed?

    We can’t know if we don’t ask the hard questions and perform a serious investigation into all that has been kept from us to date.

    --------

    Lisa Pease is a historian and writer who specializes in the mysteries of the John F. Kennedy era.

  

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Comments

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To use (some of) the words

To use (some of) the words of ex-Secretary of War Rumsfeld, we don't know what the CIA is doing, but don't we know enough to know that we ought to take the CIA down?

Second to last paragraph.

Second to last paragraph. How is that not a rhetorical question?

The CIA is of no value to

The CIA is of no value to the US, not in terms of "itelligence" gathering" and not in terms of security. It must be dismantled forthwith.

"Or do we live under a

"Or do we live under a government run by covert operators for purposes undisclosed?" (above article) Why we have senseless wars. Why we have no health care. Why American jails are full to the brim and getting fuller. Why the Supreme Court decided Bush would be president. Why we have senseless endless wars. Why international corporations are allowed to destroy the environment and the climate. Why we are nothing but corporate slaves. Another memo JFK put out before he was assassinated- Intent to disband the CIA.

General Smedley Butler once

General Smedley Butler once said that "War is a racket. It is the only one international in scope. It is the only one in which the profits are reckoned in dollars and the losses in lives." The CIA are our covert soldiers carrying on the same effort in the name of business, nominally in peacetime. Because they are the international "muscle" for business nobody in congress can touch them. If they try, their own "campaign contributions" go away, or worse. So don't expect to see anything but political theater in regard to the CIA. They are untouchable.

'CIA’s longstanding

'CIA’s longstanding relationships with the media, so well detailed in Carl Bernstein’s landmark article “The CIA and the Media,”'... That's one way of putting it. Another is to say flat out, as in fact Bernstein did, that "the CIA owns everyone of consequence in the major media." That's why, even though two-thirds of Americans believe, and the 1970s investigation found, that the assassination of JFK was in fact the result of a conspiracy, America's mainstream media paint anyone who reports these facts as a "conspiracy nut".

Ron Paul 2012! He would

Ron Paul 2012! He would eliminate the CIA, FBI, Federal Department of Education and about every other dangerous or failing federal Institution and give power back to the States where it belongs.

By the people, of the

By the people, of the people, for the people..? Come on, these are just damn words for fools to believe in. For decades now, the USofA has been run by crooks and thugs. But, since the American people can't think for themselves, nor have the stomach for a real fight, we are stuck with the corrupt gov't we have. When this, or the next administration goes after the American public, it will be too late. All those who could have lead a rebellion will be dead or incarcerated. Divide and conquer, eliminate the opposition outright. Tactics as old as war itself.

I wonder how many honorable,

I wonder how many honorable, intelligent, charismatic, realistic, honest, committed, trustworthy, incorruptable potential leaders, politicians, government officials have been chopped down, discredited, harassed, humiliated and threatened (because of being perceived as a threat to the existing system) by the existing system and its lackeys... which may be why they are almost non-existent nowadays.

Just because congress has a

Just because congress has a history of standing by idly while our democracy is undermined does not mean they should get a free pass. It's time for them to lay down the law. Repugs are fonding of trying to pretend bush jr. didn't represent every one of the values they hold dear, simply because he (and their values) are so outrageously unpopular. They say things like, "he's not a 'real' conservative". My response is this: "Oh really, so I guess you won't mind if he's held accountable for his crimes. I guess you won't try to stop him from being put in jail for treason, right?" They can't have it both ways. If they still want to defend him from his responsibilities, they have to stop trying to distance themselves from his well-deserved low approval rating.

Of course the CIA lied to

Of course the CIA lied to the Congress. The purpose of secrecy in the CIA and other intelligence agencies is to conceal from the people of the Unites States the actions they are carrying out. When they can’t entirely conceal those actions, they deceive and mislead the people of the United States, including the Congress, about them. Does anyone think the victims of torture are unaware that they are being tortured? Or who is doing the torturing? Or when it happened? Does anyone think that the victims of covert actions in foreign countries are unaware that they are being sabotaged? Or that they don't know who is behind the sabotage? Secrecy and lying are the domestic stock in trade of the CIA and the other intelligence agencies. They lie and conceal their actions to prevent any real discussion of the actions of the US government in the political process. You can’t run an empire with 535 members of Congress blabbing publicly about the dirty tricks you’re pulling overseas. You can’t overthrow foreign democratic governments to install obedient dictatorships with those same 535 Congressmen and Senators talking about it on the public record, getting it onto the front pages of the newspapers. Of course the CIA lied to the Congress. It's what they do.

It is an unfortunate truth

It is an unfortunate truth that the United States, like all major countries, needs a secret intelligence branch, but we do. It is also unfortunate that our current intelligence agencies feel it necessary to lie and mislead our representatives and the American people and to take so many actions that are ultimately not in the best interest of our country, but they do. However, it is of the greatest importance that we take control of our spy agencies and get rid of the political hacks that feed us bad information, while replacing them with agents whose primary mission is providing accurate reporting.