ConservativeINC

December 10, 2007

CIA Hero Destroyed Those Documents

Filed under: War, Wolves in Sheeps Clothing — admin @ 9:02 pm

Here’s a piece from the NY Times:

C.I.A. Official in Inquiry Called a ‘Hero’

By MARK MAZZETTI

WASHINGTON, Dec. 9 — At a conference in El Paso in mid-August, Representative Silvestre Reyes of Texas, the Democratic chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, heaped praise on a man whose exploits, he joked, had been the inspiration for the television show “24.”

From fast cars to fine wines, Mr. Reyes said, the appetites of the man, Jose A. Rodriguez Jr., are the stuff of legend. Then turning serious, Mr. Reyes hailed Mr. Rodriguez’s three decades of undercover work for the Central Intelligence Agency, where he recently stepped down as head of its clandestine service, and called Mr. Rodriguez an “American hero.”

Four months later, Mr. Rodriguez’s role in the destruction of hundreds of hours of videotape of harsh interrogations of two operatives of Al Qaeda is at the center of an inquiry by Mr. Reyes’s committee on Capitol Hill. With a separate Justice Department inquiry that could lead to a full criminal investigation into the matter, the man who spent a career in the shadows has been thrust uneasily into the spotlight.

Mr. Rodriguez is hardly the only current or former agency official under scrutiny. In the months ahead, investigators will try to reconstruct the chain of events leading up to the decision in November 2005 to destroy the interrogation tapes, and to determine who else inside the agency may have approved the decision.

According to a former top intelligence official who has spoken to Mr. Rodriguez in recent days, Mr. Rodriguez remains confident that he acted lawfully and had the authority to destroy the tapes. He could not be reached for comment.

Jose A. Rodriguez Jr.
[Jose A. Rodriguez Jr.]

Whether C.I.A. lawyers in fact approved the destruction will be a question for investigators in Congress, the Justice Department, and the C.I.A. inspector general’s office. Some Congressional officials said that they want to know why Porter J. Goss, the C.I.A. director at the time the tapes were destroyed, appears never to have notified Congressional committees about the destruction.

Mr. Rodriguez, who was born in Puerto Rico, spent much of his C.I.A. career working in Latin America, including in Mexico, and ascended in the 1990s to lead the agency’s Latin America division.

He is regarded both by admirers and detractors as blunt, effusive and fiercely loyal to his staff and friends. In 1997 he was removed from his position after he interceded on behalf of a friend who was arrested in the Dominican Republic, trying to get the Dominican government to drop the charges. A report by the C.I.A.’s inspector general criticized Mr. Rodriguez for a “remarkable lack of judgment.”

Despite the reprimand, Mr. Rodriguez continued to ascend through the agency. Shortly after the Sept. 11 attacks, he was appointed chief of staff of the Counterterrorist Center, which nearly overnight had ballooned to a staff of nearly 1,700 from 400.

Some at the agency were surprised when soon afterward Mr. Rodriguez was tapped to take over the counterterrorist center. Many at the C.I.A. said they believed that Mr. Rodriguez, who had no experience in the Middle East nor Arabic language skills, was a poor choice at a time when the agency’s biggest task was dismantling Al Qaeda’s worldwide network.

But he won praise while in the job for an aggressive strategy to capture, detain and interrogate leaders of Al Qaeda, a program that since 2004 has come under intense Congressional and legal scrutiny.

New details emerged Sunday about when members of Congress were first told specifics about the program. The Washington Post reported that top lawmakers had raised no objections during a September 2002 briefing about some of the techniques C.I.A. operatives were using to get information from Al Qaeda detainees — including waterboarding, a procedure that causes a feeling of suffocation and drowning.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, among the lawmakers who attended the briefing, issued a statement on Sunday saying that she eventually did protest the techniques and that she concurred with objections raised by a Democratic colleague in a letter to the C.I.A. in early 2003.

Soon after Mr. Goss became C.I.A. director in 2004, Mr. Rodriguez was put in charge of the Directorate of Operations, the agency’s covert branch that was renamed the National Clandestine Service in 2005.

After he announced his retirement from the C.I.A., he was asked to take over the National Counterterrorist Center after the departure of retired Vice Adm. John Scott Redd. He turned down the position.

Representative Reyes declined a request on Sunday for an interview about Mr. Rodriguez, but issued a statement saying his committee is planning not just to examine the circumstances of the destruction of the videotapes, but to conduct a “broad review” of the C.I.A.’s detention and interrogation program.

“I’m not looking for scapegoats,” his statement said.

Oddly enough, I believe Representative Reyes when he says “I’m not looking for scapegoats.” He’s aiming for the total destruction of America’s clandestine services. The democrats want to eliminate all the hard tools (military and Intelligence, with diplomacy being “soft”) of America’s foreign policy repertoire. If a democrat becomes president and they retain control of the House and Senate they will enact changes that will make the Church Committee’s damage to America’s intelligence apparatus look like peanuts and they will completely decimate the military.

During all of this, however, a man who has dedicated his life to serving his country will be dragged through the mud. There’s no doubt in my mind that he had mine and your best interests at heart but he is going to be dragged through the mud and will be treated worse then a common criminal. All because he destroyed some documents. Documents that Representative Reyes and his ilk would have doubtlessly used to destroy this man’s life.

Before I go, I have to take one last shot at Representative Reyes. He is the Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee; you know this because you read the article. But he is also the person who, as said Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, had no clue which Islamic sect makes up al Qaeda or Hezbollah. But I’m sure he is just the person who should determine the future of America’s clandestine services. BigT

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3 Comments »

  1. If the man were a true hero, he would have made the secret tapes available to the news media, so that the “people” could re-claim out country, just as Daniel Ellsberg made the “Pentagon Papers” available to show the US and the world the lies on which America’s incursion into Southeast Asia was based.

    Comment by Mark In Irvine — December 11, 2007 @ 10:10 am

  2. Give me a break. Sometimes we have to do things that aren’t normally accepted. This is how the world works, deal with it.

    Comment by admin — December 11, 2007 @ 10:21 am

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