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OPENING STATEMENT
Originally posted by Ian McLean
One need look no further than the newspapers to conclude that the CIA is outdated, dangerously out of control, and should be immediately abolished.
Originally posted by Ian McLean
*Snip* and indication of horrors such that the general public is loath to face -- were they to choose to.
What does the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) do?
The Central Intelligence Agency's primary mission is to collect, evaluate, and disseminate foreign intelligence to assist the President and senior US Government policymakers in making decisions relating to the national security.1
Ten days after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, President Bush was told in a highly classified briefing that the U.S. intelligence community had no evidence linking the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein to the attacks and that there was scant credible evidence that Iraq had any significant collaborative ties with Al Qaeda, according to government records and current and former officials with firsthand knowledge of the matter.
*Snip*
"What the President was told on September 21," said one former high-level official, "was consistent with everything he has been told since-that the evidence was just not there." [2]
Who works for the Central Intelligence Agency?
The CIA carefully selects well-qualified people in nearly all fields of study. Scientists, engineers, economists, linguists, mathematicians, secretaries, accountants and computer specialists are but a few of the professionals continually in demand. Much of the Agency’s work, like that done in academic institutions, requires research, careful evaluation, and writing of reports that end up on the desks of this nation’s policymakers. Applicants are expected to have a college degree with a minimum GPA of 3.0 and must be willing to relocate to the Washington, D.C., area. My Emphasis [1]
Originally posted by Ian McLean
*Snip* show that the CIA itself has acted to influence and undermine the opinion of the very public it purports to serve.
REBUTTAL #1
The National Security Act (1947), which has remained the basic charter for the organization of American intelligence, assigned the CIA five specific functions:
- advising the NSC on intelligence matters related to national security,
- recommending to the NSC measures for the efficient coordination of the intelligence activities of departments and agencies of government,
- collecting and evaluating foreign intelligence and making certain that it is properly communicated within the government,
- carrying out additional services for other intelligence agencies that the NSC determines can best be performed centrally, and
- carrying out other functions and duties related to national security intelligence as the NSC may direct.
The CIA also conducts secret political and economic intervention, psychological warfare, and paramilitary operations in other countries [1]
"he fairly well destroyed the CIA single-handedly because of his paranoia. He put a security system into place that ensures even today that CIA people work in a bubble, isolated from the way the world works. [2]
rather than looking for a mole, it searched for other logical explanations.... There was a good reason why the agency was reluctant to launch a mole hunt. It was still recuperating from a crippling witch-hunt that the legendary James Jesus Angleton had led years earlier. The careers of several promising case officers had been destroyed and the agency had been paralyzed because of Angleton’s paranoid accusations.[3]
Information collection and analysis
September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks
*snip*
abolishment of the current Presidential administration
"The CIA is an intricate network designed to reach objective conclusions through the analysis of the available confirmable data."
illegal wiretapping is a subject that I suspect may become an issue in this debate
Why would it be preferable to disband an entire intelligence community citing the "deliberate misuse of the agency" as opposed to eliminating the person(nel) responsible for the misuse?
How has the focus on the negative aspects and actions of some of the CIA's actions completely detracted and ignored the positive role that many of the agencies employees' have played throughout its' sixty plus year history?
What are the "good intentions of the American public"?
Does the current economic shift require an international presence from an American intelligence agency?
Originally posted by Ian McLean
Gone are the days of secret messages encoded in newspaper classified ads.
June 10, 2008 (Computerworld) BOSTON -- For any company moving to embrace Enterprise 2.0, some resistance to the tools that first gained traction within the consumer space is often inevitable.
But when some in the CIA began pitching Intellipedia, a Wikipedia-like project for its analysts and spies, they were met with some fierce critics. My Emphasis[1]
Originally posted by Ian McLean
These changes have eliminated the need for a 'Central' Intelligence Agency.
Originally posted by Ian McLean
And how should we judge what is 'objective' analysis?
Originally posted by Ian McLean in response to Socratic Question #3
There is no accurate objective metric.
Originally posted by Ian McLean
Do the actions of the CIA contradict the good intentions of the American public*Snip*?
Originally posted by Ian McLean
He occasionally qualifies himself with the adjective 'primary', to avoid direct misrepresentation.
Originally posted by Ian MCLean
The concept of the 'bubble' is important. It isolates CIA employees not only from the sources and results of their work, but from others in the agency -- there is no 'clear picture' in which to cooperate. Information dies in bubbles.
This was even more apparent after the Robert Hanssen spy case exploded when it was decided FBI information should be kept compartmentalized to reduce access even within the bureau in the name of protecting national security.[2]
Originally posted by Ian McLean
While the CIA has illegally wiretapped in the past, the current 'warrantless wiretapping' scandal hardly mentions them. It involves the NSA, another agency. Are you trying to cloud the issue?
The FBI evaded limits on, and sometimes illegally issued, orders for phone, email and financial information on American citizens and underreported the use of these self-issued orders to Congress, according to an internal audit by the Justice Department released Friday. The DOJ Inspector General reported that the FBI used self-issued subpoenas, known as National Security Letters, to get information on at least 143,074 targets.[3]
REBUTTAL #2
Stovepiping is a metaphorical term which recalls a stovepipe's function as an isolated vertical conduit, and has been used, in the context of intelligence, to describe several ways in which raw intelligence information may be presented without proper context. The lack of context may be due to the specialized nature, or security requirements, of a particular intelligence collection technology. Alternatively, the lack of context may come from a particular group, in the national policy structure, selectively presenting only that information that supports certain conclusions. [1]
Bewildering to outsiders, the Angleton-Colby dispute nevertheless lies near the heart of the current disarray of American intelligence. Counterintelligence is to intelligence as epistemology is to philosophy. [2] p.267
There has been much public and private speculation about the politicization of the Agency. I am convinced that this politicization was underway well before Porter Goss became the Director. In fact, I have been long concerned that a strong and well-positioned group within the Agency intentionally undermined the Administration and its policies. The argument is supported by the Ambassador Wilson/Valerie Plame events, as well as by the string of unauthorized disclosures from an organization that prides itself with being able to keep secrets. [3]
Major US Intelligence Reform Attempts 1947-2005:
- National Security Act of 1947 (1947)
- The First Hoover Commission - Eberstadt Report (1947)
- The Dulles-Jackson-Correa Report (1949)
- The Second Hoover Commission (1953)
- The Doolittle Report (1954)
- The Bruce-Lovett Report (1956)
- The Taylor Report (1961)
- The Kirkpatrick Report (1961)
- The Schlesinger Report (1971)
- The Murphey Investigation (794)
- The Rockefeller Commission (1975)
- The Church Committee (1976)
- The Pike Committee (1976)
- Clifford/Cline Proposals (1976)
- EO 11905 (Ford) (1976)
- Charter Legislation (1978)
- EO 12036 (Carter) (1978)
- EO 12333 (Reagan) (1981)
- Iran-Contra Investigation (1987)
- Boren-McCurdy (1992)
- Aspen-Brown Commission (1995)
- IC21 (1996)
- US Commission on National Security/21st Century (2001)
- 9/11 Commission Report (2004)
- WMD Commission (2005) [4]
Does the current economic shift [economic shift = the dollar tanking, rising euro, globalization, world reaction to the GWoT, new technologies] require an international presence from an American intelligence agency?
If not the CIA, who already have the resources in place, then who may be called upon to provide these services for the American public?
How are human rights violations against non Americans a threat to Americans?
Is the CIA tasked with the protection of American lives?
"It became necessary to destroy the village in order to save it." [5]
Originally posted by Ian McLean
My opponent begins by confusing advances in technology and technique with the evolution of the modern American intelligence community.
Originally posted by Ian McLean
If they cooperate, we may plausibly assume that each knows and has records detailing exactly what information they have given each other, what actions they have taken together, and what they expect from each other.
Originally posted by Ian McLean
Other agencies perform functions that the CIA once 'owned'.
Originally posted by Ian McLean
I will simply point to various attempts at intelligence reformation, initiated by the public's often-imperfect representatives, from 1947-2005:
REBUTTAL #3
Pike indicated that he believed the Agency was a "rogue elephant" out of control, as Senator Church had charged publicly. It needed to be restrained and major reporting reforms initiated....
"What we have found thus far is a great deal of the language of cooperation and a great deal of the activity of noncooperation," he announced. Other committee members felt that trying to get information from the Agency or the White House was like "pulling teeth." [2]
the intelligence committees of both houses can sometimes get co-opted by the agencies they oversee or exhibit other self-restraints that can undermine their oversight.... The intelligence committees:
The first and second self-restraints by the committees allow the intelligence agencies to shield their activities from congressional inquiry under the guise of security considerations. [3]
- claim the right to hire their staff members over the security objections of the Director of Central Intelligence or the Secretary of Defense, but in practice it rarely occurs;
- are willing to restrict the scope of their requests for classified information or limit the manner in which it is handled;
- have a high turnover among the chairman and members, which limits the accumulation of experience that can compete with the vast institutional memory of the CIA and other agencies...
- avoid investigating improprieties by individuals unless they are symptomatic of a system-wide problem or part of a bad policy at the agency involved. Even in that instance, the committees shy away from the problem if it is being considered by the agency;
- make too little use of the U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO), the congressional investigative arm, especially for investigations of the CIA.
How are you certain of the above quoted ["Other agencies perform functions that the CIA once 'owned'."]? Could you elaborate?
The memo observed that "control over, and coordination of, the collection and processing of Communications Intelligence had proved ineffective" and recommended a survey of communications intelligence activities. [4]
Originally posted by Ian McLean
With Congress clearly ineffectual, in practice and result, and with such a clear and continual pattern of misuse and rogue action, when will the American public decide that enough is enough, and demand the enactment an effective solution?
Originally posted by Ian McLean in response to Socratic Question #1 of my last post
The intelligent approach to intelligence is that nothing is ever 'certain'
The largest U.S. spy agency warned the incoming Bush administration in its "Transition 2001" report that the Information Age required rethinking the policies and authorities that kept the National Security Agency in compliance with the Constitution's 4th Amendment prohibition on "unreasonable searches and seizures" without warrant and "probable cause," according to an updated briefing book of declassified NSA documents posted today on the World Wide Web.[1]
At today’s House Judiciary Subcommittee on Civil Rights hearing on torture, Lawrence Wilkerson, former chief of staff to Colin Powell, told Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) that over 100 detainees have died in U.S. custody, with up to 27 of these declared homicides: 2
Originally posted by Ian McLean
We can also see example in the CIA's development of the U2 spy-plane, in 1955 [5]. Subsequent success contributed to the formation of the NRO, in 1960, and eventually to the consolidated NIMA (later renamed NGA) in 1996.
Originally posted by Ian McLean
Congressional attempts to reign in the CIA have, in the past, proved ineffective, time and time again.
Originally posted by Ian McLean
He then proposes, rather than elimination, a series of heavy reformations for the CIA
*Snip* carrying out other functions and duties related to national security intelligence as the NSC may direct.[3]
CLOSING STATEMENT
it is the only major American intelligence agency designed for international Intel.
*snip*
There has been no replacement of CIA performance.
create an organization that concentrated on "propaganda, economic warfare; preventive direct action, including sabotage, anti-sabotage, demolition and evacuation measures; subversion against hostile states, including assistance to underground resistance groups, and support of indigenous anti-Communist elements in threatened countries of the free world." [2]
In 1977, Rolling Stone alleged that one of the most important journalists under the control of Operation Mockingbird was Joseph Alsop, whose articles appeared in over 300 different newspapers. Other journalists alleged by Rolling Stone Magazine to have been willing to promote the views of the CIA included Stewart Alsop (New York Herald Tribune), Ben Bradlee (Newsweek), James Reston (New York Times), Charles Douglas Jackson (Time Magazine), Walter Pincus (Washington Post), William C. Baggs (The Miami News), Herb Gold (The Miami News) and Charles Bartlett (Chattanooga Times).
The CIA also provided them with classified information to help them with their work. [2]
Wisner was also able to restrict newspapers from reporting about certain events. For example, the CIA plots to overthrow the governments of Iran (See: Operation Ajax) [2]
Originally posted by Ian McLean
My opponent has returned to this contention, made in his opening statement, despite the fact the he himself cited four other agencies (NSA, NRO, DIA, NGA) with major responsibilities in that area.
Originally posted by Ian McLean
Other agencies perform functions that the CIA once 'owned'.
But in a surprise move, a 2009 defense policy bill passed with an amendment, sponsored by Rep. Paul Hodes (D-N.H.), that outlaws the Defense Department from engaging in “a concerted effort to propagandize” the American people. The measure would also force an investigation by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) into efforts to plant positive news stories about the
war in U.S. media.[1]
Originally posted by Ian McLean
My opponent and I agree that this unacceptable,*Snip*
Originally posted by Ian McLean
Perhaps the specialized agencies in the new intelligence community must work together, directly with one another, though all possible lines of cooperation and communication, driven by openly-managed, secure emergent coordination, resulting from all agencies' quest for highest-quality results. My heightened emphasis
Another management fix that would substitute for what we all know is the almost impossible task of restructuring the American intelligence system is to encourage interagency cooperation at all levels. Years ago a study undertaken by community managers revealed that there were dozens of informal interagency cooperative groups at various levels ficused on substantive and management issues. These groups were formed mostly because the people involved recognized the need to meet from time to time to discuss problems they faced or to anticipate issues with which they might have to deal. These groups can now communicate with each other more easily via the electronic network, but face-to-face meetings can help create bonding that technology does not achieve as well.[2]
Ian McLean actually presented a good case for a possible overhaul of the CIA, but on reading through his entire presentation a second time, the information he presented and the way in which he worded it, actually made me more supportive of the very agency he was trying to demonize.
Ian does give a solid foundation for perhaps more careful oversight and the selection of Presidential Advisors in the intelligence arena. Ian McLean’s knowledge is obviously excellent and his presentation skills worthy of a seasoned debater. The Veteran MemoryShock had his hands full.
MemoryShock initially failed to really get into the heart of the matter. He skirted much of the really relevant information presented by Ian and bypassed it without a firm rebuttal.
MemoryShock recovered nicely with his second reply; it was complete and factually supportive of his argument; addressing the debate topic with sound suggestions and obviously researched information.
Ian’s continued stance that the CIA has been investigated and therefore must be disbanded, came across as hollow and without substance in the light of MemoryShock’s rebuttals.
While both Debaters I feel fell short of their intended propositions, Ian had the “burden of proof” on why the CIA should be disband, and I feel he failed in that endeavor. He managed to give a convincing argument that the CIA should be overhauled, but never really got to the heart of the topic of the debate.
MemoryShock also missed numerous opportunities in the beginning and while he recovered at the end, still failed to capitalize on his argument, spending far too much time trying to elaborate on “Who would replace the CIA”. It was not incumbent upon him however to “prove” the CIA is effective, only that it should not be disbanded and I feel he did that.
MemoryShock by a VERY SLIGHT margin.
The topic for this debate is "The CIA should be abolished, or at the very least, heavily reformed".
From our judges...
Ian had the “burden of proof” on why the CIA should be disband, and I feel he failed in that endeavor. He managed to give a convincing argument that the CIA should be overhauled....