-Caveat Lector-

CIA disputes lawmakers' assertions about hiring practices

By GEORGE GEDDA, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (September 17, 2001 11:35 a.m. EDT) - Contrary to some
lawmakers' assertions, there are no barriers to CIA recruitment of people,
including those with unsavory reputations, who are needed to infiltrate
terrorist groups, the CIA said Monday.

Spokesman Bill Harlow commented in response to repeated calls in recent
days for an easing of perceived recruiting constraints so the CIA can collect
information on those responsible for last week's terrorist hijackings and
attacks.

"The CIA has never turned down a field request to recruit an asset in a
terrorist organization," Harlow said. "Furthermore, the CIA does not avoid
contact with individuals, regardless of their past, who may have information
about terrorist activities."

Another official, asking not to be identified, said the guidelines simply require
field officers to obtain approval from headquarters before establishing a
relationship with an individual who had engaged in human rights abuses or
other disreputable activity.

The official added that there seems to be a misunderstanding about whether
the guidelines hamstring CIA recruiting efforts.

Sen. Bob Graham, D-Fla., who heads the Senate Intelligence Committee,
said last week, "We are not going to find the kinds of spies we need in
monasteries."

Sen. Richard Shelby. R-Ala., suggested Sunday that the agency needs
unsavory characters in its ranks if it is to make headway.

"Are they people you wouldn't want to invite to your home? Absolutely,"
Shelby said. "But we have to deal with these people to get at the bottom of a
lot of information we want like terrorist cells."

The CIA recruiting practices made headlines in the mid-1990s following
allegations that several CIA agents in Guatemala ordered, planned or took
part in human rights abuses, including assassination, since 1984.

The most publicized cases involved the killings in Guatemala of an American
innkeeper, Michael Devine, in 1990, and of a Guatemalan guerrilla leader,
Efrain Bamaca, who was married to an American lawyer. Bamaca was killed
in 1992.

In 1996, the Intelligence Oversight Board, a presidential panel, found the
allegations against CIA personnel in Guatemala to be credible.

Then-CIA Director John Deutch took a number of actions, including the
dismissal of the chief of the Latin American Division of the CIA's Directorate
of Operations.

In addition, a former CIA station chief in Guatemala was asked to retire.


Steve Wingate, Webmaster
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