Washington Post
Hammering the Wrong Nails
The 9/11 Commission's 'Solution' Won't Fix the Real Intelligence Failures
By Jim Hoagland
April 17, 2005

Richard A. Posner does not simply point to feet of clay. He attacks them
with hammer, tongs and clarity of insight when it comes to the dangers of
the ragged overhaul of U.S. intelligence that Congress and the Bush
administration now pursue.

By Posner's lights, the Sept. 11 commission, with the help of indolent and
uncritical media, stampeded panicky politicians into "a premature,
ill-considered commitment" to an intelligence reform that will do little to
improve this nation's security against surprise attack.

By declaring relatives of the Sept. 11 terrorists' victims its "partners"
and giving them a platform, the commission "lent a further unserious note to
the project. . . . One can feel for the families' loss and understand their
indignation . . . without thinking that the status of being a victim's
relative is a qualification for opining on how the victim's death might have
been prevented."

And he points to this fundamental flaw in the way the commission was
organized: "To combine an investigation of the attacks (the causes, the
missed opportunities, and the responses) with recommendations for preventing
future attacks is the same mistake as combining intelligence and policy. The
means believed available for solving a problem influence how the problem is
understood and described."

This is the policymaker's equivalent of every problem looking like a nail if
you have only a hammer: If bureaucratic reorganization is the only obvious
answer, bureaucratic failure had to be the problem from the outset. Ergo,
blame the spies for intelligence failure and centralize: Create a director
of national intelligence (DNI) and draw a new organization chart for the
nation's overlapping but uncommunicative spy agencies.

Posner, a federal appeals court judge in Chicago, a law professor and a
prolific author of books on public policy, makes these points in "Preventing
Surprise Attacks," a bold and welcome antidote to the commission fatigue
settling over a Washington awash with reports and congressional hearings on
intelligence failure and reform.

It provides the starting point for a useful reassessment of the National
Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States nine months after
that body's report was issued and as President Bush's first director of
national intelligence prepares to take office.

Posner's short book asks big questions that were skirted in last week's
minutiae-drenched hearings on the nominations of John Negroponte to be DNI
and John Bolton to be ambassador to the United Nations. Those hearings
shifted attention away from where it should now be focused.

The senators' questions and statements suggested that improving intelligence
and protecting it from "politicization" will provide a shield against
surprise attacks and other international harm.

But that approach treats intelligence as an exact science that produces
clear truths. It vastly overestimates the perfectibility and efficiency of
centralized bureaucracies in general and spy agencies in particular. The
senators also inadvertently deemphasize the urgent need to fund and organize
the civil defense and other "first responder" programs that will be needed
to battle terrorist attacks that do get through.

Negroponte dutifully promised to call 'em as he sees 'em and to give the
president "the unvarnished truth." That pacified the senators, who could
have more usefully spent the time reading Posner's explanation as to why
adding one more rung in "the ladder of command" will ensure that "less
information will reach the top" than before.

The careerist imperative in Washington "is based on the known reluctance of
civil servants, even those not involved with classified materials, to share
information with their superiors," the judge writes. Instead, the
bureaucracy strives to maintain "the knowledge deficit" that a political
appointee brings to a new post. A knowledgeable policymaker quickly becomes
his or her own intelligence agent, developing outside sources and
discounting what subordinates provide.

That sounds cynical. But it has a ring of truth. Congress can pretend to be
no better. The overlapping, overextended and highly politicized oversight
committees that deal with intelligence continue to resist reforming
themselves. They instead shift blame to the spies and the rest of the
administration and the conflicts between them.

Posner paints with such vivid and broad strokes that he at times goes
astray. He underestimates, for example, the potential for civil liberties
abuses that would accompany the centralization of domestic intelligence in
an MI-5-type organization.

But Posner's demystification of the Sept. 11 commission and of the role of
the Sept. 11 families in the "massive public relations effort" to win public
support "before the report could be read" is timely and pertinent. You can't
read this book and come away believing that Congress has fixed the problem.

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