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Sen. Torricelli Played Key Role in Closing Down CIA Ops
Wes Vernon, NewsMax.com
Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2001
WASHINGTON - Sen. Robert Torricelli, D-N.J., led congressional efforts in the
mid-1990s that handcuffed the CIA's abilities to recruit spies - a key policy
that helped allow the attacks of Sept. 11 to take place with no intelligence
warnings.
Current and former CIA operatives say that Clinton administration policies,
which forbade the CIA from recruiting known terrorists and other criminals,
left the U.S. government bereft of all intelligence about such terrorist
groups.

In 1995, then-Rep. Robert Torricelli, D-N.J., made secrets public at the
behest of left-wing activist Bianca Jagger, his girlfriend at the time,
according to Newark Star-Ledger columnist Paul Mulshine in the
January/February issue of Heterodoxy.

The secrets suggested that the CIA had on its payroll one or more unsavory
characters who had been involved in murder.

Torricelli gave away secrets he obtained through his membership on the House
Intelligence Committee.

This so outraged then-Speaker Newt Gingrich that he tried to have the New
Jersey Democrat kicked off the panel.

Later, Torricelli was criticized in a committee report for having compromised
American intelligence-gathering abilities around the world, adding that
numerous CIA sources had decided to stop giving information for fear they
would be outed by a congressman.

At the time, Torricelli's activities and leaks against the CIA garnered a
large amount of press attention.

Mulshine’s article showed how Torricelli’s action in giving away the name of
a CIA source in Guatemala was based not on fact, but on a conspiracy theory
of "the loony left,” as Heterodoxy later characterized it.

The lawmaker was accused of having leaped to a number of inaccurate
conclusions about the CIA’s role in the deaths of an American hotel owner
named Michael DeVine and a Guatemalan guerilla named Efrain Bamaca Velazquez.

In its 1997 report, the House Intelligence Committee had this to say about
the antics of Torricelli, by then a senator:

"None of the allegations raised by Rep. Torricelli in the March 22, 1995
letter to the president [Clinton] or subsequent public statements concerning
the involvement of the CIA in the DeVine and Bamaca deaths in Guatemala have
proved true.”

Still, Torricelli efforts paid off with the Clinton administration, which
moved to ban the use of spies or the recruitment of spies that had any
involvement with criminals or terrorists.

Torricelli effectively blinded the CIA.



It was about the time of this well-publicized incident that the CIA’s slide
into a deteriorated human intelligence capability accelerated.

As a former CIA spy in the Mideast told NewsMax CEO Christopher Ruddy, Bill
Clinton simply changed the rules of how spies are recruited. A former CIA
official later confirmed this to Fox News Channel's Bill O'Reilly.

And it was done in such a way as to make it impossible to recruit effective
human spies. The agency, then under Director John Deutch and his top
assistant Nora Slatkin, implemented a "human rights scrub” policy.

Or as Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Bob Graham has noted since
Tuesday’s attacks, effective human spies "are not found in monasteries.”

Torricelli did not respond to repeated efforts by NewsMax.com to get his
comment for this article.

But he turned up Monday night on Fox News Channel’s "The O’Reilly Factor” to
defend himself. O’Reilly accused him of "tying the CIA’s hands,” although he
did not let Clinton or then-CIA Director John Deutch, off the hook.

Torricelli said the CIA could hire anyone it wanted to spy for the U.S. - as
long as the station chiefs get permission from Washington.

That set O’Reilly off. The popular TV host said the CIA agents had no
confidence in Deutch - "They hated him” - and they didn’t want to bother
that "extra layer of bureaucracy” in Washington, "where they’re out to lunch
half the day anyway.”

"You don’t know that, and I don’t know that,” Torricelli shot back. "But the
point is, on the principle, the agency’s hands are not tied. They can hire
anybody they want. They’ve got to get permission.”

"Here’s the deal,” retorted O’Reilly. "The terrorists can blow up the World
Trade Center. They don’t have to get anybody’s permission, all right? They
can just do it. But if we want to hire somebody as a quick tip that that may
be coming down, you can’t do that without permission from some pinhead in
Washington.”

"I’m not sure the terrorists should set the standard we want to follow,” the
New Jersey Democrat countered.

"We’re just defending ourselves!” exclaimed the television journalist.

Torricelli ended up blaming the CIA, saying they "had the authority to do it
under law. They just didn’t do it.”

O’Reilly said the station chiefs and field agents believed that Deutch
"didn’t know his butt from his elbow.” He added that Torricelli had caused
another layer of bureaucracy to be created "within an agency that needs to be
nimble and brutal.”

O’Reilly did not bring up Bianca Jagger.

Like Ruddy, O’Reilly has been talking to former CIA operatives whose opinion
of Deutch is universally low.

Torricelli has been in the news recently because of a federal investigation
into bribery allegations against him.

The Nicaraguan-born Jagger, ex-wife of Rolling Stones rock star Mick Jagger,
has appeared on Fox News Channel and other media outlets to promote
environmental and other leftist causes and rail against America's use of the
death penalty. She has also been romantically linked to Sen. Christopher
Dodd, D-Conn.




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