http://www.rinf.com/columnists/news/meet-the-cias-new-baghdad-station-chief

Monday, January 29th, 2007
Meet the CIA’s New Baghdad Station Chief

Ken Silverstein

Given the desperate situation in Iraq, the CIA’s Baghdad station chief 
needs to be an exceptional manager who can marshal the agency’s forces 
and work closely with the U.S. armed forces. Unfortunately, several 
sources have informed me that the CIA has nominated a man who has been 
widely criticized within the agency and seen as a bad fit for the role. 
Furthermore, I’m told, the new station chief is closely associated with 
detainee abuses, especially those involving “extraordinary 
renditions”—the practice of covertly delivering terrorist suspects to 
foreign intelligence agencies to be interrogated.

By law, I cannot tell you the name of the new station chief, so I will 
call him James. He is the son of a well-known and controversial figure 
who served at the agency during its early years. Sources with whom I 
spoke say James was stationed in Algeria in the early 1990s, after the 
military staged a coup to block a sweeping victory by Islamist forces in 
parliamentary elections (and thereby triggered a bloody civil war that 
lasted eleven years). During the mid-1990s, James served on an Iraq task 
force that sought to contain and destabilize Saddam Hussein’s regime.

Later, James was posted to the CIA’s Counterterrorism Center (CTC), 
where he served as chief of operations, effectively the number four 
position at the center. He oversaw Alec Station (the unit charged with 
hunting Osama bin Laden, which was disbanded late last year) as well as 
the CTC branch that directed renditions. Following the 9/11 attacks, 
James served as station chief in Kabul and then in Islamabad.

James is close to Cofer Black, the CTC’s director from 1999 to 2002 and 
currently vice-chairman for the private security contractor Blackwater. 
It was Black who famously said, “After 9/11 the gloves came off,” and 
several people with whom I spoke said that James shares Black’s 
enthusiasm for tough methods. James was a key advocate for the increased 
use of renditions after 9/11 and was a central figure in the rendering 
of Ibn al-Shaikh al-Libi, who was suspected of running a major Al Qaeda 
training camp. Al-Libi was picked up by Pakistani security forces in 
late 2001, following the fighting at Tora Bora in Afghanistan, and was 
turned over to the FBI for questioning. But James wanted the CIA to take 
charge of al-Libi, and so he pressed his case with then‒CIA director 
George Tenet, with Black at the CTC, and, through them, with the White 
House. Despite the strong objections of the head of Bagram Air base and 
FBI director Robert Mueller, James got his way, and the CIA soon took 
charge of al-Libi. (Newsweek has an account of the fight between FBI and 
CIA, which I have confirmed independently.)

“[James] thought al-Libi was being uncooperative and he saw the FBI as 
an impediment to getting the information he wanted,” said one person 
with direct knowledge of the affair. “He had a sympathetic audience at 
the CIA and [also at] the White House, which spearheaded the rendition. 
But al-Libi was already cooperating with the FBI, only the White House 
didn’t think [the Bureau] was being aggressive enough.”

The CIA transferred al-Libi to Egyptian intelligence, which is known for 
its “aggressive” tactics. The Egyptians got al-Libi to talk, but much of 
what he said, undoubtedly obtained under torture, was nonsense—including 
bogus information about collaboration between Al Qaeda and Saddam 
Hussein that soon found its way into then‒Secretary of State Colin 
Powell’s notorious address to the United Nations.

The appointment of James has the support of top CIA officials, including 
the current head of the agency’s Near East Division (whom James once 
appointed to run Alec Station and who I’m told is soon to be the new 
Associate Deputy Director for Operations). But sources have told me that 
James has frequently been divisive and ineffective in previous positions.

One former official who knows James well described him as “a capable 
officer,” but, he said, “I heard he had been selected to go to Baghdad, 
and was shocked. He is a linear thinker, very cautious and uninspiring. 
His reputation and relationship with the military, especially the 
special-ops community, is very bad, based on substantive issues that 
arose during his time [in Afghanistan and Pakistan] post-9/11. He is the 
wrong guy to send, especially when General [David] Petraeus is headed 
out to take our final shot at turning Iraq around.”

Another former official called James a “smart guy” who had developed a 
good relationship with Afghan president Hamid Karzai, but described him 
as a terrible manager. “He’s the last guy you want running a tense place 
like the station in Baghdad, because he creates a lot of tension 
himself,” he said.

This person—and two others with whom I spoke—was highly critical of 
James’s role in renditions and said that he would certainly be subject 
to scrutiny if an investigation into that program is launched. “These 
guys believed that the memos written by [Albert] Gonzalez and lawyers at 
the CTC gave them the legal authority to do what they wanted,” he said. 
“But in my view that was just stuff we were writing to ourselves. No 
judge ever reviewed them to see if the tactics they approved were 
actually legal.”

* * *

Note: I contacted the CIA for comment but was unable to reach the press 
office on Sunday. I’ll update this story if I hear back.

+++




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