The Rise and Rise of Robert Gates
The Specialist (Part 3)
by Roger Morris
Beirut, Lebanon, Friday, March 8, 1985, an Islamic Sabbath -- In Bir El-Abed, an impoverished, crowded Shiite quarter in the southern reaches of the Lebanese capital, Muhammad Husain Fadlallah stops on the street to speak to an elderly woman; and so, the revered 51 year-old cleric, delayed momentarily, will not be home at the usual time when a car bomb explodes at his apartment doorstep with a force felt miles away in the Chouf Mountains and well out in the Mediterranean.
"Even by local standards," reported the New York Times from car-bomb and shell-shocked Beirut, the explosion "was massive." Eighty-one people were killed -- men, women, and children -- and more than two hundred wounded. Fadlallah, the target of the attack, was unhurt. The next day, a notice hung over the devastated area where grief-stricken families were still digging the bodies of loved ones out of the rubble. It read: "Made in the USA."
Tomgram: Roger Morris, The CIA and the Gates Legacy
It's
fitting that, as part 3 of Roger Morris' monumental portrait of Robert
Gates, the CIA, and a half-century-plus of American covert action comes
to a close, a CIA document dump of previously secret materials from the
1950s, 1960s, and 1970s has put the years when our Secretary of Defense
first entered the Agency back in the news. Assassination plots against
foreign leaders, kidnappings, warrantless wiretapping of reporters, the
illegal opening of American mail, illegal break-ins, behavior
modification experiments on "unwitting" citizens, illegal surveillance
of domestic dissident groups and critics of the Agency -- it seems
never to end.
And yet, you have to read Morris on Gates to
realize how much this list still lacks when it comes to the acts of the
CIA. It is, after all, one of the ironies of our moment that our
(relatively) new secretary of defense now travels the American world --
to Kabul and Baghdad in particular, where he frets about Tehran -- only
to find himself, in essence, confronting (though our media never
bothers to say so) the consequences of the misdeeds of his younger
self. It's a grisly record and, not surprisingly, a grisly world has
been its result.
If you haven't read bestselling author (and
former National Security Council staffer) Roger Morris' first two parts
on Gates and the CIA -- "The Gates Inheritance" and "The World That
Made Bob," then do  so and prepare yourself for the mayhem of the world
Gates helped make when, in the 1980s, he came into his own. That this
is the man meant to save us from the disparate fundamentalisms of Bush
the Younger and Dick Cheney tells us a great deal about just how low
we've sunk. - Tom
The Rise and Rise of Robert Gates
The Specialist (Part 3)
by Roger Morris
Beirut, Lebanon, Friday, March 8,
1985, an Islamic Sabbath -- In Bir El-Abed, an impoverished, crowded
Shiite quarter in the southern reaches of the Lebanese capital,
Muhammad Husain Fadlallah stops on the street to speak to an elderly
woman; and so, the revered 51 year-old cleric, delayed momentarily,
will not be home at the usual time when a car bomb explodes at his
apartment doorstep with a force felt miles away in the Chouf Mountains
and well out in the Mediterranean.
"Even by local standards,"
reported the New York Times from car-bomb and shell-shocked Beirut, the
explosion "was massive." Eighty-one people were killed -- men, women,
and children -- and more than two hundred wounded. Fadlallah, the
target of the attack, was unhurt. The next day, a notice hung over the
devastated area where grief-stricken families were still digging the
bodies of loved ones out of the rubble. It read: "Made in the USA."
The sign was more apt than even its furious makers knew. The
terrorist strike on Bir El-Abed was a classic product of American
covert policy. Behind the bombing lay a convoluted secret history and,
beyond that, a longer legacy of power wantonly uninformed by
"intelligence."
Agreeing, as usual, with the proposals of CIA
Director William Casey, President Ronald Reagan sanctioned the Bir
attack to avenge a devastating truck-bombing of the U.S. Marine
barracks at the Beirut Airport in October 1983 -- itself a bloody
reprisal for earlier American acts of intervention and diplomatic
betrayal in Lebanon's civil war that had cost hundreds of Lebanese and
Palestinian lives. The barracks attack slaughtered 241 Marines, part of
an international peacekeeping force sent to Lebanon in the wake of the
1982 Israeli invasion of the country.
After its own operatives
had repeatedly failed to arrange Casey's car-bombing, the CIA "farmed
out" the operation to agents of its longtime Lebanese client, the
Phalange, a Maronite Christian, anti-Islamic party, avowedly built on
the Italian fascist model. The CIA targeted Fadlallah, in particular,
because of his reputation for fiery sermons in favor of social justice
and national independence -- and because allied spy agencies --
Israel's Mossad, Saudi Arabia's GID, and Phalangist informers --
claimed he led a militant Shiite group that bore responsibility for the
attack on the Marines.
In fact, Washington was unsure who had
killed them. "We still do not have the actual knowledge of who did the
bombing of the Marine barracks at the Beirut Airport," Caspar
Weinberger, Reagan's Secretary of Defense, told PBS in 2001, "and we
certainly didn't then."
While a spiritual mentor to many,
including militants, in Lebanon's long-oppressed Shiite community,
Fadlallah was known to shun any office in a political party or secular
organization. Ironically, while the Reagan administration and the CIA
feared the influence of theocratic Iran among Lebanese Shiites,
American scholars and other informed observers knew Fadlallah as an
insistent voice against Iranian dictates. He had repudiated Iran's
urging of Shiite rule over multi-faith Lebanon -- so much so that some
in Tehran even suspected him of pro-American sympathies.
CIA
officials also knew that all three "friendlies" -- the Israelis,
Saudis, and Phalangists -- frequently tried to manipulate U.S. policy
to their own advantage. This was regularly done with "cooked" (or
withheld) intelligence or by joint-actions meant to enhance the
standing of senior CIA officials. An ex-Mossad officer would later
reveal, for example, that Israeli intelligence had learned in advance
of the Marine barracks plot, yet raised no alarms, calculating that
such an attack might spur anti-Arab sentiment in the U.S -- or even
drive the Marines out of Lebanon, giving Israel a freer hand. Only too
glad to have the Americans, or their clients, do the dirty work of
killing Fadlallah, a Saudi billionaire proposed to pay for the Bir
bombing himself; and the CIA accepted.
In fact, the Bir
bombing rested on information known in the CIA to be false, or, at
best, highly suspect. As a result, it was one of the most heedless and
consequential atrocities in the history of CIA covert actions -- no
small distinction. The pivotal figures in that decision, the men who
made all the difference, included the then-still-obscure CIA Deputy
Director for Intelligence and self-styled Middle East expert, Robert
Gates.
As documents, testimony, and other revelations would
later make clear, the Bir plot was typical of Reagan era covert
actions, which would include: Illegal aid to drug-running Contras (at
war with the left-leaning Sandinista government of Nicaragua);
contraband arms sent to both Iraq and Iran (at war with each other);
tens of millions of dollars to the anti-Soviet Catholic Church in
Poland, but also to nun- and priest-murdering death squads in El
Salvador; and, most fateful of all, hundreds of millions to Islamic
fanatics in Afghanistan. In the Reagan administration's secret wars --
from Managua to Tripoli, Beirut to Kabul -- crucial decisions were
often taken not in careful deliberation with the secretaries of state
and defense, the national security advisor, or other top officials, to
say nothing of the requisite Congressional committees, but when the CIA
director and the president were alone.
There they would be,
usually in the Oval Office: Hard-line zealot and Catholic dogmatist
Bill Casey, mumbling his plan (as he typically did), notoriously
careless with facts, ever ready for the bloodiest of covert actions,
and by far the most powerful CIA chief in history. With him, Ronald
Reagan, an ever genial man whose archetypal simplicity and decency
endeared him to voters, but who was known by his closest advisors to be
nearly oblivious to the details of policy, and even hard of hearing in
one ear. "Didn't understand a word he said," Reagan remarked with a
shrug after a typical briefing with the mumbling Casey. Yet, in almost
every instance, the President characteristically agreed -- or seemed to
hear and agree -- on whatever covert action his former campaign manager
was hatching.
For the Agency's director, it meant awesome,
unprecedented, power. The only check on him lay with his three
deputies, among the precious few who learned of his schemes before
Reagan would nod approval. In the Bir plot, two of those men were
hardly prone to oppose the director. Principal Deputy John McMahon and
Deputy for Operations Clair George were careerists from the CIA's
covert side. Along with most of their underlings, they knew little of
the increasingly complex religio-political currents and countercurrents
roiling the Middle East. To some extent, they also depended on, and so
were enmeshed with, the same foreign spy services targeting Fadlallah.
In
general, they tended to welcome covert action paid for and carried out
by allies. Such operations appeared to involve little risk to the CIA,
or their reputations, but offered the possibility for easy credit. Not
least, they owed their powerful jobs to the Director, whose right-wing
zeal and extraordinary sway they relished. "Inspired by Casey's
enthusiasm for high-rolling covert action," Washington Post reporter
Steve Coll wrote, "they loved his energy and clout."
Typically,
there was, then, but one chance to head off the coming Bir atrocity.
The Agency's Directorate of Intelligence, under Bob Gates' direction
since 1982, was the repository for the sort of analysis that was
supposed to inform any covert-action or foreign-policy decision. If
Operations was the CIA's muscle and guile, Intelligence was meant to be
its eyesight, hearing, nerves, brain, its sense and sensibility. Casey
did not often formally consult the analysts in his operational
machinations, but Gates was his closest deputy, privy to every covert
action, and commonly went beyond his nominal role as head of "analysis"
in directly recommending policies and actions or ordering and shaping
intelligence studies to support whatever policy Casey wanted.
In
the winter of 1984-1985, the Middle Eastern specialists of Gates'
directorate were never officially informed of the Bir bombing plan.
They could, however, make out its silhouette from cable traffic,
requested briefings, and other bureaucratic jungle drums that beat in
even the most closely-held operations. They saw the assassination of
Fadlallah taking shape, if not the use of a massive car bomb guaranteed
to kill scores in the vicinity.
"In our shop, we knew what
Casey would be looking for in revenge for the barracks bombing and what
the Israelis and Saudis were pushing," related one analyst who would
later become a senior Agency official. "We laid out all the unknowables
and caveats and how we were being whipsawed [by allied spy agencies],
and we sent it upstairs for Gates to give to Casey, and we recommended
it be bootlegged to the NSC and White House and even to Defense if it
came to that."
When there was no sign that Gates had done
anything with their warning, two of the analysts confronted the deputy
director. "This is terrible," one of them told him.
"We are
not here to pick a fight with the boss," Gates answered dismissively.
"I'm not particularly concerned about some set-to in Lebanon."
Risking
their careers, the analysts tried to warn officials they knew in the
Pentagon, but they got no response. A few weeks later, like any other
outsiders, they would read the New York Times account of the Bir
explosion. "I was literally sick," one of them remembered, "the rest of
the day."
Outside of Lebanon, the CIA's Bir operation would be
a passing, little-noticed tragedy, the sort that sometimes marks an
epoch. Among those of Fadlallah's bodyguards not killed in the
explosion, 22 year-old Imad Mugniyah would join the emerging Lebanese
Shiite group Hezbollah and, over the next decade, as a shadowy chief of
security, direct a series of reprisal attacks against Americans in a
bloody chain reaction of terror and counter-terror. Among Fadlallah's
admirers, outraged by the bombing and ever after distrustful of the
Americans he had once admired, was a round-faced, 25 year-old theology
student of already recognized charisma and organizational skills. He
would rise to become Hezbollah's leader -- and, after his forces fought
the Israeli invasion of Lebanon to a standstill in the summer of 2006,
one of the most popular figures in the Arab world: Sheikh Hassan
Nasrallah.
In a sense, the bomb that shattered Bir El-Abed
began to be assembled eight years earlier with the arrival in the White
House of a grinning, God-fearing Georgian who pledged memorably in his
inaugural address: "To be true to ourselves, we must be true to others.
We will not behave in foreign places so as to violate our rules and
standards here at home, for we know that the trust which our nation
earns is essential to our strength."
"Great Continuity"
On
election night 1976, the three American television networks closed
coverage with the old Democratic victory song, "Happy Days Are Here
Again." The words sounded right to many who were banking on a
post-Vietnam turn to wisdom in foreign policy from the newly elected
Jimmy Carter. For the first time in more than a decade, American forces
were not in, or near, major combat anywhere on the planet.
The
concerted right-wing, military-industrial challenge to détente of
1974-1976 had been beaten back. Its Republican champion, Ronald Reagan,
had fallen short in his GOP presidential race with Gerald Ford. The
Democrat's prototype neoconservative, Washington Senator Henry Jackson,
despite a huge corporate and Israeli lobby war chest, had proved an
uninspiring candidate and was eliminated in the primaries. Now, gone
from the White House as well was Ford, who in the final year of his
presidency had fallen into traditional Cold War mode, and with him two
key officials who had eagerly joined the drive to push policy
ever-rightward, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and White House Chief
of Staff Dick Cheney.
In their place were new men, apparently
chastened by Vietnam. The national security advisor was Zbigniew
Brzezinski. As an academic he had been the epitome of a Baltic Syndrome
Russophobe, but in presidential politics, as an advisor to Hubert
Humphrey in 1968 and Jimmy Carter in 1976, he had been circumspect
while angling for high office.
Brzezinski in any case looked
to be outnumbered by the new administration's declared "moderates" --
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, an establishment elder who had emerged
from the Kennedy-Johnson era quagmire-averse, committed to détente, and
to a further strategic arms limitation treaty (SALT II); at the
Pentagon, a defense establishment scientist, Harold Brown, who abhorred
the thought of foreign military entanglements while he rebuilt
Vietnam-shattered department morale; and, at the CIA, a Navy prodigy
who had been first in his (and the new president's) class at Annapolis,
"Admirable Admiral Stansfield Turner," as the New Republic called him,
a thoughtful, even reforming exception to the increasingly well-known
horrors of the Agency's history.
At the outset, the New York
Times editorially praised this regime as "rightly unruffled by the old
politics of cold war confrontation." The right-wing National Review was
likewise sure that Washington "will now shrink from battle with the
enduring enemy." Both were wrong. No one reckoned with the 52 year-old
Georgia governor and former peanut farmer, whose provincial political
freshness and moral uprightness was welcomed by a Watergate- and
Vietnam-weary public. Nor did they reckon with Brzezinski and an
energetic assistant named Robert Gates.
As with so much else,
our barely surface-scraped history has yet to show the tragic
complexity that was Jimmy Carter, whose presidency one scholar would
sum up as "snatching defeat from the jaws of victory." There were omens
of what was to come even before he took office -- his long-held support
for the Vietnam War, his campaign-trail vagueness (like Brzezinski's),
his administrative equivocations as governor, his steely religiosity
born of a conversion following an electoral defeat. Whatever the
causes, the effects would be all too plain.
Brzezinski and
aide Bob Gates knew their man. With earnest conviction, habitual
vacillation, and chaotic management of his soon splintering regime,
Jimmy Carter -- behind what the doomed Shah of Iran once described as
his "frozen blue eyes" -- would prove among the coldest of cold
warriors. Four years later, when the incessant bureaucratic infighting
for the President's favor was over, Vance (no pussycat) was a broken
man; Brown and Turner had been sidelined; and even a victorious
Brzezinski was uneasy with the wreckage they had wrought.
By
then, the precedents had been set for the imperial excesses that would
make the 1980s the preamble to our own post-9/11 era. Though glad to
see them go, at least one beneficiary of their rule was happy with the
result. "Great continuity between Carter's approach…. and that of his
successor, Ronald Reagan," was how Bob Gates would proudly describe it.
"Competition" Trumps "Cooperation"
When it came to the
Soviet Union, Carter was typically inconsistent in his first months in
office, veering between one tactic and another in arms control while a
bureaucratic war over SALT II erupted around him. On Gates'
recommendation, the new president met with perennial hawk Paul Nitze,
now representing the Committee on the Present Danger, the latest
right-wing, military-industrial front fielded to attack détente. Soon,
Brzezinski and Gates had won a defining victory. They had persuaded
Carter to bring in the national security advisor's old friend and
onetime co-author, Samuel Huntington, as a special consultant on
strategic policy. The Harvard reactionary would later become one of the
gurus of the neoconservative movement (and author of the
ubër-Orientalist book, The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of
World Order).
In the summer of 1977, his cohorts would leak to
the Washington Post that Huntington's job was "to scare the Carter
Administration into greater respect for the Soviet Union." Working in
liaison, Huntington, Gates, and hard-liners in and out of government
promptly did just that -- a process which culminated in Presidential
Review Memorandum #10, (in which both Brzezinski and Gates were
instrumental). A time-honored "study," using flawed or confected
intelligence and meant to channel presidential policy, the infamously
shallow PRM-10 nodded to détente, while legitimizing the fraudulent
premise of the old Team B, that 1976 group of right-wing outsiders a
Reagan-nervous Ford had commissioned to counter the CIA's non-existent
underestimation of Soviet strength.
The conveniently
have-it-both-ways Huntington-Brzezinski-Gates document combined
"cooperation and competition" into a single U.S. policy toward Russia
-- the first half to be honored with pledges of faithfulness by
diplomatic day; the second indulged with a serial philanderer's abandon
by covert-action night. Among other historic effects, PRM-10 would be
the basis for what would develop into Carter's "rapid deployment force"
in the Persian Gulf, meant to protect American "access" to Middle
Eastern oil, and eventually into a full-fledged Gulf military command,
CENTCOM.
It would signal the beginning of what historian
Andrew Bacevich has labeled our "oil wars" in the region. More
generally, the "report" sanctioned, for a new era, the use of
trumped-up "special" panels or consultants to incite political alarm in
the body politic whenever militarism -- and especially military
spending -- was thought to be in danger of waning.
Against the
continuing obstruction of Brzezinski and Gates, Vance would coax SALT
II, which had seemed imminent at Carter's inauguration, to a cheerless
Vienna signing at a summit meeting in July 1979. By then, however, the
negotiations had been eviscerated by Congressional opposition that
emerged ineluctably out of the growing mood of confrontation with the
USSR; and the agreement would die just six months later without Senate
ratification when Carter withdrew the treaty as part of his outraged
reaction to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Meanwhile, just as all
the hawks prodded him to do from the first weeks of his presidency,
Carter went on to approve major new weapons programs -- what the
Soviets, in mounting alarm, saw as "an endless build-up of power" --
that made the shell game of "cooperation" a travesty.
A
shallow Congress, aided by a diffident media -- along with an ever
uninformed, distracted public -- would never deal with the realities of
the Carter-launched arms build-up that would become epochal in the
Reagan years. No matter that it involved hundreds of billions of
precious taxpayer dollars, venal interests holding hostage crucial
public needs for generations to come, and, in the process, the
ever-increasing danger of national extinction in nuclear war by
accident or provocation. "Don't worry, boys," Mississippi Senator John
Stennis once told the staff of the Armed Services Committee which he
chaired, "nobody ever takes a hard look at the real numbers here."
As
Rumsfeld had admitted when he left as secretary of defense in 1977,
despite the Soviet push toward nuclear parity, the U.S. retained more
than a two-to-one advantage in warheads, a preponderance that would
continue into the 1980s. Given the fast-multiplying nuclear missiles on
American submarines, as well as the Strategic Air Command's bombers and
multiple-warhead, land-based missiles, Moscow's counterforce capacity
(its ability to destroy the U.S. deterrent) fell far short of any
conceivable first-strike option.
In the most fevered
right-wing scenarios, with the Soviet strategic force taking out 90% of
American missile silos, only 18% of the American strategic array would
have been lost. On the other hand, the U.S. could calculably destroy
some 40% of the Russian deterrent force, and Carter's decision to
deploy new Pershing II missiles in Europe in the late 1970s put some of
that U.S. first-strike capacity 10 minutes from Soviet
command-and-control centers.
Meanwhile -- the point of it all
-- Pentagon budgets rose steadily. In part, that spiral was the price
for Congressional backing of SALT II, and it was invariably justified,
as it always had been during the Cold War, by inaccurate or knowingly
false claims about the rate of increase in Russian military spending.
(Moscow's expenditures actually leveled off after 1976.) It was madness
-- and business as usual.
Great Games
On a dark, cold
December night in 1979, an elite unit of Soviet troops, Kalashnikovs
blazing, dashed up the slanting drive to Darulaman Palace, a 1920s
citadel on the western outskirts of Kabul. Their mission was to kill
the communist president of Afghanistan, feared to be conspiring with
the Americans. They found him upstairs with his little boy in his arms
and cut them both down in a withering crossfire. Murdered, too, was an
epoch in world politics, and launched was another with unprecedented
dangers we still face.
The very post-Vietnam détente-restraint
of most of Carter's advisors -- and the President's own inner
hawkishness -- opened the way for his presidency to become (contrary to
conventional wisdom) a precedent-setting period for covert
intervention. And Gates, as Brzezinski's hard-line staff officer for
Soviet affairs, and later his personal outer-office assistant in the
White House West Wing, was at the center of it all.
In his
1996 memoir, he would write contemptuously (and, in the case of
Secretary of State Vance, falsely), "Because Vance was unwilling to use
diplomatic leverage against the Soviets, and [Secretary of Defense]
Brown and others wanted no part of U.S. military involvement in the
Third World, their standoff gave Brzezinski an enormous opportunity to
put forward covert action -- which was under the purview of the NSC --
as a means of doing something to counter the Soviets."
Gates
and Brzezinski promptly impressed upon Carter that, "It is his CIA," as
Gates described it. Within weeks of his inauguration, at the urging of
the national security advisor and his Soviet affairs specialist, the
new president approved the first covert actions inside the USSR. These
operations were aimed at inciting religious discontent in Soviet
Central Asia by smuggling in tens of thousands of Korans, as well as
radical Islamic literature. In that and other actions to come, it would
be Jimmy Carter who first fanned Islamic fundamentalism -- which would
have devastating consequences in our own era.
By July 1977 --
less than two weeks after the Sandinista rebels took power from the
43-year Somoza-dynasty dictatorship in Nicaragua, a long favored
Washington client in Central America -- they would begin mounting the
first covert actions against the popular, and populist, new regime in
Managua, as they would soon be shoring up a ruling oligarchy that faced
a mounting leftist insurgency in neighboring El Salvador.
There
would be similar interventions and intrigues in the Horn of Africa, on
the Arabian Peninsula, and elsewhere, always justified by the Soviet
(or proxy Cuban) menace. "On the march" was the way both Gates and his
boss were fond of describing the communist hordes. The result would be
a rash of secret wars, assassinations, terrorist acts, and manifold
corruptions around the world by the administration of the "human
rights" president. Moreover, these acts preceded, sometimes by several
years, the vaunted covert actions of the Reagan regime, which were
often only continuations of Carter policy, in some cases even on a
lesser scale. "Jimmy Carter was the CIA's first wholly owned
subsidiary," an Agency operative would boast to a friend later, "and
the beauty of it was that so few people, even on the inside, ever knew
it."
Nowhere would their penchant for the covert prove more
fateful than in the remote Hindu Kush. To an already seedy history of
American covert intervention there, they now added their own bloody
chapter.
At the behest of Pakistan, Communist China, and the
Shah of Iran (and their intelligence services), the CIA had begun
offering covert backing to Islamic radical rebels in Afghanistan as
early as 1973-1974. The explanation for this was that the right-wing,
authoritarian regime of Mohammed Daoud, then in power in Kabul, might
prove a likely instrument of Soviet military aggression in South Asia.
This was a ridiculous pretext. Daoud had always held the Russians, his
main patron when it came to aid, at arm's length, and had savagely
purged local communists who supported him when, in 1973, he overthrew
the Afghan monarchy. For their part, the Soviets had not shown the
slightest inclination to use the notoriously unruly Afghans and their
ragtag army for any expansionist aim.
Support for the
anti-Daoud religious insurgents, far more anti-American than the Kabul
regime, actually served distinctly local interests. The Pakistanis and
Iranians wanted to fend off Afghan irredentism on their disputed
borders and Pakistan was eager to secure a pliant regime in Kabul on
its western flank as it faced rival India in the East. The Nixon
administration casually supported these aims in deference to its
clients with little or no thought for the Afghans, a policy-atrocity
which would be repeated for the next quarter-century.
All the
backing ceased, however, after an abortive rebel uprising in 1975, as
Daoud launched his own détente policy with Iran and Pakistan. Then, in
April 1978, his blundering crackdown on Afghanistan's small communist
party provoked a successful coup by party loyalists in the army. This
happened in defiance of a skittish Moscow which had stopped earlier
coup plans. Aware of these facts, Vance's State Department coolly
adopted a wait-and-see attitude toward the new regime.
But
with predictable alarm bells ringing in Iran, Pakistan, and Russophobic
China, Carter's covert interventionists at the NSC saw an irresistible
"opportunity," as Gates put it, "to counter the Soviets." Three weeks
after the Kabul coup, Brzezinski was in Beijing discussing, among other
matters of state in his Kissingeresque debut as a diplomat, the "Soviet
peril" in Afghanistan.
Gates memoir dutifully notes the
ensuing stream of bland speculations by the CIA's Soviet analysts about
what the Soviets might next do in their tortured relationship with a
faltering, needy, yet independent Afghan communist regime. But he
spares us the covert actions the CIA carried out, amid a stream of
memos Brzezinski and he sent Carter about the Soviet "threat" in South
Asia -- an intervention kept secret from their hated rival, Secretary
of State Vance, and the rest of government.
By summer 1978,
the old insurgent training camps in Pakistan were open again and
thronged with Islamic radicals. They were eager to fight a regime
pushing land reform and education for women, while establishing a
secular police state. By fall 1978, more than a year before Soviet
combat troops set foot in Afghanistan, a civil war, armed and planned
by the U.S., Pakistan, Iran, and China, and soon to be actively
supported, at Washington's prodding, by the Saudis and Egyptians, had
begun to rage in the same wild mountains of eastern Afghanistan where
U.S. forces would seek Osama bin Laden a little more than twenty-three
years later.
In April 1979, with arms and agitators paid for
by the CIA and Pakistani intelligence (the Shah fell in January ending
SAVAK's role), a radical Islamic uprising in Herat in western
Afghanistan led to the slaughter of thousands on both sides, including
more than 200 Russian military and civilian advisors and their
families. Even so, the Soviets stoutly refused to intervene militarily.
They even made their refusal absolutely plain to Washington by
pointedly conducting telephone conversations with the Afghan leadership
en clair for the Americans to intercept. But Gates, Brzezinski, and
Carter were having none of it in what had become a deliberate plot to
"suck" the Russians into Afghanistan.
The old Great Game was
now in cynical full swing. In the sort of mad plan not even Rudyard
Kipling could have imagined, they plotted to personally "give the
Soviets their Vietnam," as Brzezinski was fond of saying.
The
ceaseless machinations and bloody civil strife culminated, of course,
in the December 1979 Soviet invasion. The Politburo had resisted it for
more than a year and hesitated, even at the eleventh hour. It is, by
any measure, one of the more dramatic, and chilling, stories in the
annals of world politics. By now, Brzezinski and Gates had essentially
created a new foreign policy for the United States and put it into
action in secret with few co-authors and no parallel.
By the
time, they and their co-conspirators are through, a course will have
been set that will take the Afghans into a nightmare universe in which
a million-and-a-half of them will die, millions more will become
homeless (in what the UN will call "migratory genocide"), and, for more
than a quarter-century, their country will be a continuing catastrophe
beyond any other in the history of nation-states. In part, it is his
own work that Gates now faces as secretary of defense.
"Love at First Sight"
Meanwhile,
during 1978, they were attending, with similar heedlessness, to the
long death rattle of the Shah's regime. That disaster, prelude to
another crisis that now confronts the new Secretary of Defense, is
captured in snapshots.
There is Jesse Leaf, the CIA's analyst
for Iran who has never been to Iran or met an Iranian. Like Gates, as a
Soviet specialist, he is an "expert" in the country he "analyzes" only
"from afar." He nonetheless grasps the coming collapse, not from the
"Shahdulation" of official reporting, but from incidental reading of
Alexis de Tocqueville's work on the rotten ancien régime of eighteenth
century France. When he tries to warn his superiors of what the future
may hold, unlike Gates, he sees his career stunted.
There is
Brzezinski's call to U.S. Ambassador William Sullivan in Tehran in
February 1979, as fighting rages in the streets of the Iranian capital.
The national security advisor tells the ambassador that the American
Army attaché must have his friends in the Iranian military "overthrow"
the weak post-Shah regime and "take control of the country…. to restore
order." The attaché is hiding in the basement of the Iranian Army
commander's headquarters, pinned down by gunfire, and can hardly save
himself, much less Iran, for Washington. "I can't understand you,"
Sullivan replies sarcastically, "You must be speaking Polish." It might
have been an epitaph for so much.
By the time the mullahs
control Tehran, with American diplomatic hostages languishing in
endless months of captivity, and Soviet troops occupying Kabul, Gates
has gone back to the CIA. It's a move he's long lobbied for, part of
his careful career climb -- and an escape, though not from Brzezinski,
whose office he considers "a lonely island of sanity" in a beset
president's "otherwise very screwed up White House."
He is
just settling in as a "senior manager" in the CIA's "Strategic
Evaluation Center" when a call comes from Director Turner, who has met
him often outside Brzezinski's office. Would he be the director's
assistant? Gates is reluctant -- he knows a failing regime when he sees
one, in Washington anyway -- but he feels he has no choice. So he works
for Turner through 1980, watching Carter's tormented last year -- the
failed hostage-rescue raid in Iran, the "green light" Washington
covertly gives Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein to attack Iran in what
will be a million-casualty, decade-long war, and, of course, the
president's relentless political decline, ending in the election of
Ronald Reagan. This he finds "heartening," as he tells friends.
He
still does not know just how important the Turner job he didn't want
has been; for it's there that he meets Ronald Reagan's new CIA
Director, a Republican wheeler-dealer who had been the new president's
campaign manager. He arrives at the Agency intending, as he often says,
"to make war on the Soviet Union." It is, of course, what Bob Gates has
been doing, in his own modest way, since joining the Agency in 1968.
For the 37-year old Cold War bureaucrat and the gruff 68-year-old Bill
Casey, as one witness remembers, "It was love at first sight."
A Chronology from Hell
Kids
on his block in Queens nicknamed him "Cyclone," which will fit for the
rest of his 74 years. Bill Casey pounds his way through Fordham and St.
John's Law, stumbles into a stint with the CIA's precursor, the OSS, in
World War II, and goes on to make a fortune as a flamboyant business
lawyer and schlock publisher. The future CIA Director is, by now, a
self-described "expert" not on any part of the world, but as the author
of those forgotten 1960s classics, How to Raise Money to Make Money and
How to Build and Preserve Executive Wealth, manuals that dot drug-store
magazine racks of the era.
Through it all, there will be seedy
connections in the milieu of the New York Mob, shady practices that
bring lawsuits for plagiarism, an unsuccessful Congressional run, and
constant jockeying for position on the right-wing fringes of Republican
politics. Fired by his rise as a devout leader of the Roman Catholic
laity, he also becomes a ferocious anti-communist. Buccaneering Bill
Casey, his (Jesuit-educated) Agency deputy John McMahon, and Gates
(with his own fervor) will give new meaning to the old quip about what
CIA really stands for -- "Christians in Action."
If Gates had
only done his time at the NSC and then vanished into the bowels of the
CIA, his role would have been significant, though largely unseen and
barely recorded. But with Casey's arrival in 1981, he began to rise
into the kind of visibility that would, in 2006, take him into the
Pentagon as a potential savior.
Under Nixon, Casey had been
chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, where he had lied
to the Senate Banking Committee about his past business imbroglios, and
narrowly survived ouster. In 1976, and again in 1980, he was an
energetic fund-raiser and fixer for the Reagan campaigns. When campaign
manager John Sears ran afoul of Nancy Reagan, Casey was an obvious
choice for Reagan handlers and future Washington power-brokers Ed Meese
and Mike Deaver. With Reagan's victory, when the secretary-of-state job
that he yearned for went to former Kissinger aide Alexander Haig --
"He's more handsome than I am but not nearly as smart," Casey would
quite accurately say -- the CIA was his recompense.
What now
followed for Robert Gates was a history as convoluted as it was
momentous. Here it is, ever so briefly, in year-by-year snapshots --
against the backdrop of the era's furious, far-flung covert actions,
from Nicaragua and El Salvador to Lebanon, Iraq and Iran to
Afghanistan. All of this was, in turn, accompanied by secret "wars" in
Washington which, beyond the usual clash of ambitions, called into
question the very integrity of American intelligence. Gates would be a
combatant in all of them.
1981:
Casey names Gates to
head his Executive Staff, where he "smoothes" relations between the
director and his initial chief deputy, Bobby Ray Inman, a 50-year-old
ex-admiral off various intelligence postings. On finding Casey leaking
to New York Times columnist William Safire to discredit him -- leaks
Gates joins in -- Inman hits the ceiling and departs. About the same
time, Gates begins to tell friends that he has aspirations someday to
"get to the top" of the Agency.
Gates writes Casey a crucial
memo on the Agency's "lagging" covert-action capabilities and sluggish
"responsiveness." "The CIA," he argues, "is slowly turning into the
Department of Agriculture." It is what the director has long suspected
and just what he wants to hear from his assistant.
Near the
end of the year, Gates is offered a lucrative job with a private
company providing intelligence to corporations doing business abroad.
It will double his salary with a huge signing bonus. He decides to take
it; but, the day before he is to sign, suddenly changes his mind. The
company goes out of business in a few months.
1982:
In
January, Casey appoints Gates Deputy Director for the Intelligence
Directorate. He promptly informs the analysts under him that he wants
their "best estimates," but begins to keep a "scorecard" of favored
analysts that influences promotions. "A little Napoleon," one analyst
calls him.
"It was well known among analysts at the time,"
wrote former Soviet affairs officer Jennifer Glaudemans, "that we would
have a hard time getting Gates to sign off on analyses that did not fit
his ideological preconceptions." Added Thomas Polgar, an Agency veteran
who returned as a consultant in the 1980s, "You never heard about a
Gates position that differed from Casey's. Either he sincerely believed
in Casey's ideology or he catered to it."
Casey asks Gates for
a new National Intelligence Estimate on "Soviet support for
international terrorism" and also "how far…. the Soviet Union would go
in its support for leftists in Central America." It is the beginning of
what one analyst will call "slanted studies all over the place."
Commented Glaudemans: "I heard terms such as ‘soft on the Soviets' and
‘Soviet apologist' thrown in certain people's direction."
Gates
begins "astutely" (as Time magazine would later put it) cultivating
Vice President George H. W. Bush. He takes special pains to brief Bush
personally and offers quiet personal briefings to his staff as well,
which is otherwise essentially ignored by the Reagan White House.
Late
in the year, Gates issues a report that leftist rebels in El Salvador
depend "largely" on Sandinista arms, citing as evidence a Nicaraguan
customs officer who allowed a Volkswagen allegedly carrying such arms
to cross into Honduras. "It was a laughable document," says David
MacMichael, former senior estimates officer for Latin America.
1983:
Casey
names Gates as chairman of the National Intelligence Council that
oversees the preparation of all National Intelligence Estimates (NIEs).
Though the CIA put such documents together, intelligence
analysts at the Pentagon and the State Department traditionally
inserted footnotes of dissent. Now, they are suddenly prevented from
doing so. "This false unanimity was no accident," comments a former
ranking State Department official. "It was the personal creation of Mr.
Gates."
1984:
On December 14, Gates writes Casey a
5-page policy memo, arguing that the "Soviets and Cubans are turning
Nicaragua into an armed camp with military forces far beyond its
defensive needs and in a position to intimidate and coerce its
neighbors…. [The] only way we can prevent disaster in Central America
is to acknowledge openly…. that the existence of a Marxist-Leninist
regime in Nicaragua closely aligned with the Soviet Union and Cuba is
unacceptable to the United States, and that the US will do everything
in its power short of invasion to put that regime out." This is an
unprecedented step for a deputy for intelligence.
Without U.S.
aid the Nicaraguan Contra rebels will not survive, Gates argues, but
the U.S. should also break relations with Managua, impose sanctions and
a quarantine, set up and recognize a government-in-exile, and launch
"air strikes to destroy a considerable portion of Nicaragua's military
buildup." He is recommending "hard measures," he tells Casey; it's time
to "stop fooling ourselves."
Gates will later claim that he
never shared Casey's hawkish convictions or priorities regarding
Nicaragua. "For reasons I never fully comprehended," he wrote in his
memoir, "Bill Casey became obsessed with Central America."
1982-1985 (the Middle East and Afghanistan):
The
Bir bombing in March 1985 is part of a grim sequence of events most
Americans never acknowledge. Gates knows it all intimately.
In
September 1982 -- despite U.S. diplomatic pledges that its peacekeeping
Marines will protect civilian innocents while Palestinian Liberation
Organization forces make a negotiated exit from Lebanon -- the Marines
are suddenly withdrawn and Israeli-backed Lebanese forces massacre more
than 600 unarmed people (mostly women, children, and the elderly) in
the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps. Even American officials later call
the withdrawal "treacherous" and "criminal."
In April 1983, in
reprisal, a pickup truck carrying 2,000 pounds of explosives slams into
the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, wiping out the CIA station there, among
much else. In September 1983, on the basis of CIA reports (that local
Marine commanders contest), Washington orders Sixth Fleet warships
Virginia and John Rogers to intervene in the Lebanese civil war. They
lob 24,000 pounds of shells onto the positions of a Lebanese group
opposing a U.S.-backed faction. In October 1983, a dump truck hurtles
past Marine guards at the "Beirut Hilton" barracks at the airport with
12,000 pounds of explosives, killing 241 Marines.
In February
1984, in what an official calls "one of our worst defeats," President
Reagan withdraws the surviving Marine contingent from Lebanon. In March
1984, CIA Beirut Station Chief William Buckley is kidnapped. He will
die more than a year later, still in captivity.
Three weeks
after Buckley's kidnapping, Reagan signs an order, drafted by NSC
staffer Oliver North, setting up a new, secret "Counterterrorist Task
Force" to explore the trading of arms for hostages. This will begin the
Iran-Contra scandal.
In March 1985, Phalangist agents plant
the car-bomb intended to kill Fadlallah. Around the same time, Gates
drafts plans for a joint US-Egyptian invasion of Libya, involving
extensive bombing and 90,000 U.S. troops. The plan is shelved when the
State Department protests.
That spring Gates also convenes a
special group to issue a memo arguing that the Soviets were behind the
1981 attempted assassination of Pope John Paul II. Asked years later
about the murder plot by historian Fred Halliday, he replies, "It will
probably remain one of the great unanswered questions of the cold war."
Reflecting White House pressure, in the same vein Gates also presses
analysts to implicate the Russians in European terrorism, though most
analysts know that reports prompting the White House request are false
and based on the CIA's own "black propaganda" operations ordered by
Casey at Gates' own urging.
In May 1985, Gates issues a
Special National Intelligence Estimate on Iran reversing all previous
analyses and stressing Soviet inroads into that country (even though
the fundamentalist Shiite regime of the Ayatollah Khomeini loathes
communism).
In August 1985, an NSC meeting discusses the
illegal supplying of U.S. missiles to Iran, via Israel, whose own
inventories would then be replenished by the administration.
On
October 1, 1985, CIA National Intelligence Officer Charles Allen tells
Gates of suspicions that funds are being illegally diverted from some
unknown source to the Nicaraguan Contras, though Gates claims he will
not remember being told any of this until almost a year later.
A
November 22nd Gates memo reports that Iranian-sponsored terrorism has
"dropped off substantially," another major reversal in analysis, though
no specific evidence is cited. Later that same month, U.S. Hawk
missiles are shipped illegally to Iran.
In 1985, the CIA first
notices "significant" numbers of "Arab nationals" coming to Pakistan to
fight with the U.S.-backed Afghan Mujahideen in the anti-Soviet war.
"Our mission was to push the Soviets out of Afghanistan. We expected a
post-Soviet Afghanistan to be ugly, but never considered that it would
become a haven for terrorists operating worldwide," Gates would write
in his memoirs. He would be blunter with historian Halliday: "Frankly,
we weren't concerned about what post-Soviet Afghanistan was going to
look like."
1986:
In April, Casey promotes Gates to
full Deputy Director. Later that year, Congress launches the
Iran-Contra investigation and a November 24th White House meeting
begins, as an aide to Secretary of State George Shultz notes,
"rearranging the record." At the close of the year, Casey suffers a
seizure and is hospitalized with the brain tumor that will ultimately
kill him.
1987:
Casey resigns on January 29th and, four days later, Reagan nominates Gates as director.
But
reckonings have, by now, begun. That January, Shultz tells Gates: "I
feel you all have very strong policy views. I feel you try to
manipulate me. So you have a very dissatisfied customer. If this were a
business, I'd find myself another supplier." It is only the first of
much Shultz testimony. "I had come to have grave doubts, "he would tell
Congress later, "about the objectivity and reliability of some of the
intelligence I was getting."
In February, Gates has his
confirmation hearings, amid a rising public and Congressional furor
over the multiple illegalities of the Iran-Contra Affair. The questions
are withering, especially when it comes to his implausible claim that,
as a senior CIA official, he had no incriminating knowledge of, or part
in, the scheme, and on his role as a principal drafter of Casey's
November 1986 testimony in which the director lied to Congress.
"Sycophants
can only rise to a certain level," Gates shoots back in response to
charges of pandering (and negligence) in furtherance of his career. But
to so much of what the Senators charge that he did and did not do, no
real rebuttal is possible.
A Joint Committee on Iran-Contra
asks that Gates' nomination be put on hold. Republicans warn the White
House that to continue the confirmation fight will only focus more
attention on the scandal. On March 2, Gates and Reagan withdraw his
nomination.
Might-Have-Beens
Gates' prominence would
not end, of course, with that bitter climax to his fateful six years at
Casey's CIA. In the fitful sequel to the Iran-Contra investigation,
Special Prosecutor Lawrence Walsh would secure convictions of several
ranking Reagan officials, but ruefully conclude, in a 1991 report,
that, despite a maze of evasion and prevarication, with testimony
"scripted and less than candid" and with "two demonstrably incorrect
statements," there was still "insufficient evidence that Gates
committed a crime."
Meanwhile, Congressional inquiries petered
out short of confronting the still iconic Reagan with the impeachable
offense at the heart of the scandal. They were also blunted by the
behind-the-scenes maneuvering of the ranking Republican on the Joint
Committee, Wyoming Congressman Dick Cheney.
Set against the
totality of his record, there was little doubt, however, that Gates had
been complicit in the crimes of the era, even if such a case wasn't fit
for a jury. Ironically, no indictment could have been more damning than
his memoir: "A thousand times I would go over the ‘might-have-beens.'
If I had raised more hell with Casey about non-notification of
Congress, if I had demanded that the NSC get out of covert action, if I
had insisted that CIA not play by NSC rules, if I had been more
aggressive with the Director of Operations in my first months as Deputy
of Central Intelligence, if I had gone to the attorney general." It was
a strange form of contrition, revealing how much he knew and could have
done, with all those "might-have-beens" reduced to the first and
decisive "if" -- if Bob Gates had not been the hawkish careerist he was
under Casey's richly rewarding patronage.
He would remain as
deputy under the new CIA director, former head of the FBI and St. Louis
judge William Webster, a figure of scandal-free rectitude who had
little grasp of foreign affairs or intelligence. Webster's four-year
tenure would be a holding action through the end of the Cold War. His
rule would come to grips with none of the Agency's Faustian bargains
and corrupt practices, from alliances with drug-traffickers to the
money-laundering and looting of thrifts, from 900 major interventions
and several thousand secondary actions to its 1980s bafflement at
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's glasnost and its inability to grasp
that the USSR was a moribund empire. Expected to deceive its enemies,
an intelligence service must never willfully, or by incompetence, lie
to itself -- yet that was, in large measure, Gates' legacy, and his
stand-in Webster left it intact.
In March 1989, with the
presidency of George H.W. Bush, whom he had long cultivated, Gates
returned to the NSC as National Security Advisor Brent Scowcroft's
deputy. For the next three years, in concert with Cheney as Secretary
of Defense, he waged a final battle against the Soviets, denying at
every turn that the old enemy was actually dying.
When Webster
retired in 1991, Bush nominated Gates again as director, and for a time
it seemed, as a Senate staffer put it, "smooth sailing." Then,
suddenly, he found himself facing what one old colleague called a
"virtual insurrection" of current and former CIA officers, who trooped
to Capitol Hill to testify with unprecedented candor and courage to his
record of corruption of intelligence.
It was an extraordinary
rebellion against what the New York Times called Casey's (and, by
extension, Gates') "dark legacy." In the end, there would be an
unprecedented 33 Senate votes against confirmation. Senate Intelligence
Committee Chairman David Boren had to conduct "his own covert action"
to secure the nomination, as one witness described it. ("David took it
as a personal challenge to get me confirmed," Gates would write.) An
Oklahoma Democrat with wealthy backers and presidential ambitions, as
well as a personal reputation long the subject of Washington whispers,
Boren soon shocked constituents by a hasty retirement to a sinecure
presidency at the University of Oklahoma. Boren's chief aide and legacy
to the world of intelligence would be a former lobbyist for
Greek-American interests, George Tenet.
As director at last,
Gates would convene some 14 committees on reform and reorganization,
shift budgets from the Cold War to the new targets of terrorism and
economic espionage, and pursue other changes national security
historian John Prados would find "laudable and energetic." But in his
little more than a year in office, there would be no substantive
changes in the enduring culture of the Agency. "After all that had
happened, after all we knew," one ranking officer said of the flurry,
"no one was listening."
Gates would remain under the new
president, Bill Clinton, just long enough for one final disaster,
providing what Prados called the "initial architecture" for the
outgoing Bush regime's "humanitarian" invasion of Somalia, and so
paving the way for Clinton's disastrous Black-Hawk-down episode in the
streets of Mogadishu. It was a fitting exit, the Rangers bleeding and
dying under the guns of gang lords who had once been in the pay of the
CIA.
The Last Hope?
Gates' CIA retirement in 1993
would be punctuated by delayed detonations from the past: There would
be a Russian intelligence archive linking him to the notorious 1980
"October surprise" in which weapons of U.S.-origin were shipped to
Iran, while the embassy hostages, already held for so long in Tehran,
were not released until after Ronald Reagan's election. A former NSC
staff officer gave sworn testimony that Gates was implicated in illegal
arms shipments to Saddam Hussein in the Iraq-gate scandal of the 1980s.
A CIA Inspector General issued a devastating post-mortem on the
Agency's analytic "hyperbole" in the Gates years, as well as its
security disasters with Soviet moles Aldrich Ames and Edward Howard,
among others.
Not least, there was the Gary Webb episode, in
which an intrepid young journalist in California uncovered a Los
Angeles connection in the Agency's busy drug-trafficking with the
Nicaraguan Contras. He would be professionally and personally broken to
the point of suicide when his reporting was savagely attacked by major
papers that had dodged the story to begin with – and, when Webb's
series broke, had been treated to extensive "briefings" by Gates and
other officials of the era to discredit the revelations, which even the
CIA's own Inspector General would later partially vindicate.
And
yet, his 1996 memoir was a truly self-satisfied document, celebrating
the Cold War "victory" -- his victory -- over an enemy that "was an
evil empire." The Agency emerged from his account as an earnest college
faculty of slightly inconsistent quality, whose covert actions were
invariably, bloodlessly "necessary." Asked once why the CIA had
supported the most fanatically atavistic mujahideen groups in
Afghanistan, he answered simply, and with a kind of devastating,
pass-the-buck candor, that the anti-Soviet intervention had been
"delegated to the Pakistanis and it was their decision." Asked about a
"disgraceful record of interference in other countries," he replied, in
the same fashion, that it had all been done "on the instructions of the
president."
His savings and retirement accounts added up to no
more than $165,000 when he left government. By the time he was named
secretary of defense by a desperate, cornered president in 2006, he was
a millionaire from his $525,000 salary as President of Texas A&M as
well as directorships that ranged from Boston's formidable Fidelity
Investments to drilling, pharmaceutical, and military-industrial
giants. At Texas A&M, his four-year presidency would be a stalking
horse for powerful alumni eager to take the provincial school
"national." He cut staff, but hired a big-time football coach and
athletic director, repudiated affirmative action while claiming more
minority enrollment on the overwhelmingly white campus.
Now,
seven months into his tenure at the Pentagon, he has brought to bear
his long-honed bureaucratic infighting skills, at every opportunity
replacing senior commanders associated with Don Rumsfeld with his own
choices from the military bureaucracy. He's brought with him as well
his own rhetoric and style which, in any other Washington, would be
unexceptional, but in the angry wake of Rumsfeld, seems somehow
encouragingly fresh and benevolent.
Some who know the record,
or at least part of it, see him now as Gates Unbound -- the bureaucrat,
if not sycophant, as his own man at last. He is looked to longingly by
an unnerved, older-line Washington establishment as the man who might
bring a wayward regime back to its senses. Never mind genuine
sensibility about the world of the twenty-first century; what's at
stake now is just surviving the Bush era.
The challenges
facing him, of course, involve far more than simply damage control (as
if he were back at Texas A & M dealing, as he did, with the
unfortunate aftermath of a traditional bonfire that got out of hand and
killed some of the faithful). After Rumsfeld, but also after nearly
half-a-century of high-tech decadence, America's cannibalized military
may well be at its lowest point ever; while, in Gabriel Kolko's simple,
if memorable, observation, the United States now faces the "most
dangerous period in mankind's entire history."
It is not a
predicament that can be escaped simply by staving off some further
bonfire -- like a mad attack on Iranian nuclear facilities; nor will
Gates, even if successful, be capable of taking more than the initial
steps in a rescue in the 18 months that are likely (though hardly
destined) to be the extent of his Pentagon rule. But in none of it --
neither the apparently encouraging contrast to Rumsfeld, nor the simple
avoidance of disaster in Iran -- does his record, his life story, give
us grounds for more than the frailest of hopes. Yet, it is a mark of
our time, an era he helped make, that, for the moment, Bob Gates, of
all people, may be the last and best hope we have.
Roger
Morris is an award-winning author and investigative journalist who
served in the Foreign Service and on the Senior Staff of the National
Security Council under Presidents Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon.
Before resigning over the invasion of Cambodia, he was one of only
three officials comprising Henry Kissinger's Special Projects Staff
conducting the initial highly secret "back-channel" negotiations with
Hanoi to end the Vietnam War in 1969-1970. He is the author of several
critically acclaimed books, including Richard Milhous Nixon: The Rise
of an American Politician, 1913-1952, and the best-selling Partners in
Power: The Clintons and Their America as well as, most recently, The
Money and the Power: The Making of Las Vegas and Its Hold on America
(co-authored with historian Sally Denton). His Shadows of the Eagle, a
history of U.S. covert intervention in the Middle East and South Asia
since the 1940s, will be published by Knopf early in 2008. His studies
and commentary on American politics and foreign policy appear regularly
on the website of the Green Institute where he is Senior Fellow.
Copyright Roger Morris 2007
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