Did Wolfowitz Blow CIA Secret
To Set Up the President?
by Jeffrey Steinberg
Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, the Administration's leading "Chickenhawk"
proponent of the imperial doctrine of unilateral pre-emptive war, may have willfully
"blown a CIA covert operation in early November. His possible purpose: To set up
President Bush, and force through the Chickenhaws' illegal doctrine against strong
opposition within the intelligence community and from others on the Bush national
security team. Some details of the incident were provided by Newsweek in its
Nov. 18 issue; Wolfowitz's actions were broadcast live on CNN on Nov. 5; and two
high-level national security sources provided EIR with additional crucial leads.
The essentials of the story are as follows: On Sunday, Nov. 3, six purported top
al-Qaeda members were killed, when the car they were driving in the Marib province
of Yemen, near the Saudi border, was blown up. Initial news reports said the car had
been carrying highly inflammable propane gas, and that perhaps, someone in the car
was careless with a cigarette.
Among the six killed instantly in the blast was Qaed Senyan al-Harithi, a.k.a.
Abu Ali, who was on the FBI's Most Wanted List, and was suspected of having
masterminded the October 2000 attack in Yemen on the USS Cole. It later turned
out that one of the six men was an American citizen, Kamel Derwish, who was accused of
recruiting a cell of al-Qaeda sympathizers recently arrested in Lackawanna, New York,
an industrial suburb of Buffalo.
The initial word out of Yemen was that the car explosion could have been an
accident, or an act of clan warfare. As Newsweek reported, "It was a
plausible cover story, but it lasted less than 48 hours. Tribesmen told journalists
they had seen a helicopter flying near the scene of the explosion. In Washington,
reporters suspected that the 'helicopter' was in fact a Predator, a low-flying,
missile-firing unmanned drone. Had the United States taken out the terrorists with a
well-aimed Hellfire missile? By Tuesday morning, Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul
Wolfowitz was not only confirming the story, he seemed to be boasting about it."
Indeed, in a Nov. 5 interview with CNN's Maria Ressa, Wolfowitz was the first,
andaccording to one intelligence community sourcethe only American
government official to blow the covert operation. Wolfowitz told CNN that the attack
in Yemen was "a very successful tactical operation"; and added, "One
hopes each time you get a success like that, not only to have gotten rid of somebody
dangerous, but to have imposed changes in their tactics and operations and procedures."
Wolfowitz, who never served in the military, but who has been the loudest proponent
within the Administration of a U.S. military invasion of Iraq, blabbed on to CNN about
the apparently new U.S. doctrine of pre-emptive assassination: "Sometimes when
people are changing, they expose themselves in new ways. So we've just got to keep the
pressure on everywhere we are able to, and we've got to deny the sanctuaries everywhere
we are able to, and we've got to put pressure on every government that is giving these
people support to get out of that business."
Newsweek confirmed that Wolfowitz's revelations were not well received inside
the intelligence community. "The CIA," Newsweek noted, "which ran
the operation, was furious with the Defense Department for blowing its cover story."
Newsweek authors Evan Thomas and Mark Hosenball elaborated on the controversial
Wolfowitz leak. "The CIA has always preferred to operate in the shadows to preserve
'deniability.' Better, the spooks and most diplomats say, not to embarrass friends and
clients by making them look like American stooges. Yemen's President Saleh was 'highly
pissed' when the Predator story leaked, says a knowledgeable source. Now CIA officials
worry that the leak will discourage other countries from allowing Predator strikes
within their borders. They blame the Defense Department for making a macho show of
force."
The Christian Science Monitor on Nov. 12 confirmed that the Yemeni officials
were furious at the leak. Brig. Gen. Yahya M. Al Mutawakel, the deputy secretary general
of the ruling Peoples Congress Party, complained, "This is why it is so difficult
to make deals with the United States. This is why we are reluctant to work closely with
them. They don't consider the internal circumstances in Yemen. In security matters,
you don't want to alert the enemy." One former CIA official interviewed by
Newsweek put it this way: "The Pentagon view seems to be, this is good, it
shows we can reach out and touch 'em. The CIA view is, you dumb bastards, this means no
other country will cooperate with us."
Indeed, former CIA general counsel Jeffrey Smith warned that the Wolfowitz leak and
the underlying policy of pre-emptive assassinations would blow up in the face of the
United States and jeopardize the war on terrorism. "There is a moral issue, and
you'll make mistakes and generate resentment abroad."
When State Department counter-terrorism chief Francis Taylor attended a conference
in Manila, the Philippines, just days after the Wolfowitz leak, he encountered a wall
of opposition to the now-public U.S. policy of preventive assassination. Wolfowitz's
warnings to governments carried the implicit message that the United States would
carry out such attacks with or without permission from host governments. The Malaysian
government issued a stern warning that it would not cooperate with the United States
in allowing American hit teams to operate on its soil.
`Chickenhawk Intelligence Agency'
It is not possible to say, precisely, what prompted Wolfowitz to take the
extraordinary step of going on CNN to expose a secret CIA assassination program.
Leaks of classified information, particularly such damaging information, ought to
trigger a serious investigation into Wolfowitz. When former CIA Director John Deutch
was caught bringing classified materials home and uploading them onto a family personal
computer, it generated a full investigation, and led, shortly, to his resignation.
Former U.S. Ambassador to Israel Martin Indyk had his security clearances stripped for
a period of time, while government counterintelligence investigators probed whether he,
too, was mishandling classified material, and holding unauthorized meetings with the
head of the Mossad. It is not known at this point whether there is a live investigation
into Wolfowitz's action.
What is now well established, however, is the fact that Wolfowitz, along with other
Israeli-allied Chickenhawks in the Pentagon, have been conducting their own intelligence
operations, directed against the Middle East intelligence assessments coming out of the
CIA and even the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA). Wolfowitz's "Chickenhawks
intelligence agency" is being run by Doug Feith, the Assistant Secretary of Defense
for Policy, in close coordination with the Defense Policy Board, headed by Richard Perle.
One thing that Wolfowitz, Perle, and Feith all have in common is that they were all
suspected, in the 1980s, of being part of the "X Committee" of Israeli spies,
inside the Reagan-Bush Pentagon, who were running the Jonathan Jay Pollard spy
operation, in league with Ariel Sharon and "Dirty Rafi" Eytan, the head of
Israel's Lekem scientific espionage agency. -- TOP
Wolfowitz's actions came precisely at the moment that President Bush and Secretary
of State Colin Powell were finalizing an agreement with Russia, France, and China, to
secure passage of a United Nations Security Council resolution on Iraq. For Wolfowitz
and the Chickenhawk/Sharonistas in the Bush Administration, this decision signaled a
delay, and perhaps, cancellation of the war on Iraqfor which Wolfowitz et al. had
been pressing since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
Wolfowitz's actions have jeopardized cooperation with scores of governments around
the world, whose close collaboration is vital to any effectiveand
legalcounterterror campaign. This effort to subvert the President's war on terror
cannot go unchallenged.
ARTICLE SOURCE