A Spy's View of Pelosi's War on the CIA
By: Ion Mihai Pacepa
FrontPageMagazine.com | Wednesday, May 20, 2009
I paid with two death sentences—from my native Romania—for the privilege of
serving the CIA, our first line of defense against terrorists and nuclear
despots, and I am appalled to see the Speaker of the U.S. House of
Representatives and third in line for the White House undermining the security
of the United States for personal political gain.
Nancy Pelosi’s blistering public attacks on the CIA will severely damage its
ability to recruit ranking sources in enemy countries for years to come. No, the
CIA officers will not run for cover—they are anonymous heroes, not cowards. But
the potential high-ranking CIA sources in Iran, Syria, North Korea, China,
Russia, Venezuela, Cuba and many other tyrannical countries will. Espionage is a
matter of life and death. From my own experience as both intelligence recruiter
and intelligence defector I know that no high ranking official puts his/her life
in the hands of a foreign espionage organization publicly pilloried by its own
government.
Trust is the most valuable asset of any espionage service, no matter its
nationality or political flavor. This is the most important thing I learned
after spending 27 years in Romania’s version of the CIA—six of them managing
it—and another 31 years cooperating with the CIA. There are many ways an
espionage service can lose trust. Disrespect for its own commitments and
careless exposure of its sources and operations are just two of them. But
nothing could be more devastating than public distrust from its own government.
I do not intend to compare the CIA with my former Romanian foreign intelligence
service, the DIE, but there is a lesson there. At the peak of the Cold War, my
DIE recruited as agents the highest-ranking employees the Soviet bloc ever had
in NATO: the chief of NATO’s department for secret documents (François Rousilhe)
and NATO’s deputy finance director (Col. Nahit Imre). We paid them in gold
Napoleon coins. Both were eventually arrested by the French DST, and Romania’s
tyrant Ceausescu ordered a vengeful public investigation of the DIE. My service
was never again able to recruit any significant sources in any of its target
countries. After I broke with communism, Ceausescu ordered another public
investigation of the DIE, which soon disintegrated.
The CIA helped the U.S. win the Cold War without firing a shot because it was an
ultra-secret organization trusted by its government and able to protect its
sources and methods from public exposure. That allowed the CIA to gain the
confidence of many ranking officials in both Eastern and Western Europe. Some
became builders of democracy, others fighters of communism. In 1962, the U.S.
avoided a nuclear war because a ranking CIA source (Soviet colonel Oleg
Penkovsky) provided top secret documents proving that Khrushchev was installing
nuclear rockets in Cuba. Soon after that, NATO neutralized the Warsaw Pact
because another ranking CIA source (Polish colonel Ryszard Kuklinski) passed the
CIA over 35,000 pages of Warsaw Pact secret military documents, making Moscow’s
strategic plans obsolete.
In the early 1970s, however, when I decided to defect to the CIA, the
Rockefeller Commission publicly painted the CIA as a rogue, out-of-control
organization, and the Church Commission presented it as a criminal outfit that
could not be trusted. Of course I postponed that irreversible step. If the U.S.
government did not have confidence in the CIA, why should I?
In March 1978 I accompanied Ceausescu on a triumphant visit to the U.S., where
President Carter publicly called him a “great national and international
leader.”[1] Four months later I screwed up my courage to break with communism,
and I told the Carter administration that it was praising the wrong guy. The
admired Ceausescu was in fact an international terrorist who had made a fortune
by trafficking in arms and drugs, and who was in the process of selling weapons
of mass destruction to terrorist states. Ten years later, this “great national
and international leader” was executed by his own people.
Ceausescu was a two-bit Dracula, unable to endanger the security of the United
States. But he illustrates the difference between the day-to-day intelligence
collected by the CIA, and the intelligence provided to it by highly-positioned
human assets able to tell what satellites cannot—what terrorists and nuclear
despots have on their minds, and what their secret plans against us are.
In 1978, when I defected to the CIA, I hoped other heads of enemy intelligence
services would follow in my footsteps. This has yet to happen. A new wave of
Congressional investigations hit the press, exposing the CIA’s failures in
handling intelligence defectors and agents. Those revelations would have scared
the guts out of me, had I still been in Romania. They evidently scared off
others.
The result? George Tenet’s “slam dunk” finding that Iraq had stockpiles of
nuclear weapons is the greatest intelligence fiasco in American history. Over
4,000 U.S. soldiers paid with their lives for the CIA’s lack of an Iraqi Pacepa,
able to tell the truth about Saddam. For the same reason, the clerical regime of
Iran was able to build a massive—and until recently secret—industry for
producing nuclear weapons. Also for the same reason, Putin was able to surprise
the White House with his military invasion of Georgia, treacherously started
during the opening night of the 2008 Olympic Games.[2] And also, for the same
reason, in 2009 the U.S. did not know if North Korea would launch a military
rocket or a weather satellite until that event took place.
In 1986, Director of Central Intelligence Bill Casey sent me a letter explaining
the CIA’s failures. The root cause, the DCI wrote, was the misguided management
on the part of some earlier CIA bosses, who had relied almost exclusively on
satellite and signals intelligence, a reliance that had wreaked havoc with the
CIA’s entire human intelligence collection effort. That was indeed true—I had
experienced it on my own skin—but the problem could have been quietly corrected.
Instead, it generated new public hearings that caused new international distrust
of the CIA.
The bipartisan oversight of our intelligence operations by the U.S. Congress is
a desirable expression of democracy. To the best of my knowledge, however, none
of our main allies has voluntarily washed the dirty laundry of its foreign
intelligence business in public. Their services also make mistakes, but they are
usually corrected quietly. Espionage is a secret and merciless war that is
especially perilous when waged against brutal tyrants—even the slightest
indiscretion could endanger the lives of our officers and their sources.
Former KGB colonel Vasily Mitrokhin spent 12 years collecting over 25,000 top
secret KGB documents, described by the FBI as “the most complete and extensive
intelligence ever received from any source.” Mitrokhin intended to give this
unique cache to the CIA, but he ended up delivering it to MI6, the British
equivalent of the CIA. That foreign intelligence service gave him more
confidence that his identity—hence his security—would be protected. Until very
recently, even the name of the MI6 director was classified.
In the U.S., however, the 9/11 Commission spent 567 pages to publicly blame the
CIA for not identifying the 19 terrorists before they hijacked the airplanes,
although terrorists entering the U.S. may be as elusive a target as seeking a
needle in a haystack. Some 80 million passengers flew to the U.S. that year
alone, on 823,757 commercial and 139,650 private flights; 330 million people
crossed the Canadian and Mexican borders during the same year by car, train and
truck; and some other 18 million entered the country by sea.[3]
The Commission also blamed the CIA for being unable to capture bin Laden. Nobody
remembered that a homegrown American terrorist, Eric Rudolph, was still at large
in the U.S. five years after blowing up the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, despite
massive searches organized by thousands of FBI agents, police officers and
volunteers. (Rudolph was accidentally arrested on May 31, 2003, while rummaging
through a dumpster in Murphy, North Carolina.)
The Commission—and the U.S. Congress in general—ignored the most important
requirement to make America safe against foreign enemies. That is: to build
trust in the CIA.
President Barack Obama became the 44th U.S. president largely because he
promised change. Changing the habit of Washington’s politicians to build their
own careers by undermining our intelligence community is a good place to start.
The U.S. has the best conceived, endowed and motivated espionage service that
ever existed. It should be so. Made in America is a premium label around the
world. We are at war, and this sensitive national security tool should be used
to protect our country, not to improve the stature of ambitious politicians.
Notes:
[1] President Nicolae Ceausescu’s State Visit to the USA: April 12-17, 1978,
English version (Bucharest: Meridiane Publishing House, 1978), p. 78.
[2] Clifford J. Levy, “Putin suggests U.S. provocation in Georgia clash,”
International Herald Tribune, August 29, 2008.
[3] Arnold de Borchgrave, “Sea no evil,” The Washington Times, March 15, 2005,
Commentary.
Lt. Gen. (r) Ion Mihai Pacepa is the highest Soviet bloc official granted
political asylum in the U.S. On Christmas day 1989 Ceausescu and his wife were
executed at the end of a trial where the accusations came almost word-for-word
out of his book Red Horizons, subsequently translated in 27 languages.