Leon Panetta For DCI?


That’s the story. There are, however, some problems to consider:

President-elect Barack Obama is naming Leon Panetta, a former congressman from California and chief of staff to President Bill Clinton, to be CIA director. Obama also has picked retired Navy Admiral Dennis Blair to be director of national intelligence, overseeing all the nation’s spy agencies, a Democratic official said.

The selection pairs a top military man with a quintessential Washington insider - but that combination appeared to irk some key Senate Democrats, who expressed concern that Panetta does not have an intelligence background. “My position has consistently been that I believe the agency is best-served by having an intelligence professional in charge at this time,” said California Sen. Diane Feinstein, who will oversee Panetta’s confirmation as chair of the Select Committee on Intelligence.

Sen. Kit Bond (R-Mo.), the vice chairman of the committee, also questioned the choice of Panetta. “Job number one at the CIA is to track down and stop terrorists. In a post-9-11 world, intelligence experience would seem to be a prerequisite for the job of CIA Director. While I will reserve final judgment on President-elect Obama’s nomination for the leader of our terror-fighting agency, I will be looking hard at Panetta’s intelligence expertise and qualifications.”

Panetta’s “intelligence expertise and qualifications” are nearly nonexistent. To be sure, he was Chief of Staff to President Clinton and dealt with intelligence matters but it’s one thing to serve as a consumer of intelligence and quite another to serve as a producer. Panetta has no experience whatsoever being a producer of intelligence and does not know how to be the head of an organization responsible for producing intelligence.

This does not faze some of Panetta’s defenders, who assure us that all of the sudden, intelligence experienceis not all that important. What matters, we are assured, is judgment. That’s nice; of course, given the background of the incoming President of the United States, one might expect that experience would be downgraded. But after a while, these snide dismissals of experience grow lame, do they not? We have a major task ahead of us to augment our intelligence gathering and analysis capabilities and we are picking someone to serve as DCI who has no background whatsoever in these matters. Am I to believe that we shouldn’t be nervous over that?

I am certainly nervous over this:

A former senior CIA manager said the message of the Panetta appointment was clear: “The message is, ‘I don’t want to hear anything out of the CIA. Make it go away. No scandals. Keep it quiet,’” the former officer told me. “They put over there a guy who is a political loyalist, who will keep everything nice and quiet, but who won’t know a good piece of intelligence from a [fertilizer laden] piece of intelligence, and wouldn’t know a good intelligence officer” from a bad one.

Yeah, sleeping at night after reading that quote ought to be challenging. Fortunately, it would seem that there are some Democrats who are just as concerned as I am.

I wouldn’t have had much of a problem if Leon Panetta was the President-elect’s choice for Budget Director or Secretary of the Treasury or Chief of Staff. But DCI? Justifying this appointment is a tall order. And if it cannot be justified, then whatever the deference one might owe to a new President in his/her personnel selections–and I believe the deference owed is presumptively considerable in nature–Leon Panetta should not be confirmed as Director of Central Intelligence.

Category: , , , ,

RSS feed | Trackback URI

8 Comments Leave a comment

Whaddya know... Bond got it right.

bs Tuesday, January 6th at 1:08AM EST (link)

After his pander-fest with the Big 3 bailout, I was wondering if old age was starting to catch up with him.

Decorum is fo’ suckas

Heh

Brian Simpson Tuesday, January 6th at 1:24AM EST (link)

I had the same reaction.

The Minority Report | Twitter | Facebook | Digg | Politics4All | Missouri Matters | Rebuild the Party
Important principles may and must be inflexible. ~ Abraham Lincoln

 
 

obama is above his pay grade and the US Taxpayer is stuck for it.

bobojake Tuesday, January 6th at 1:20AM EST (link)

obama’s lack of qualifications are bearing there ugly teeth now. Its time for all the former Presidents to take obama by the short hair Wednsday and give him a few pointers.

What could be

Warner Todd Huston Tuesday, January 6th at 4:32AM EST (link)

What could be more obvious!? Obama hasn’t a clue what he’s doing.

———-
Be sure and Visit my Home blog Publius’ Forum. It’s what’s happening NOW!

 
 

Bush Sr.

Yil Tuesday, January 6th at 4:45AM EST (link)

One of the reasons I thought Bush Sr did so well as President was because of his experience as CIA director and obviously his time as VP. The coalition he put together to reclaim Kuwait was impressively done and I think his experience with foreign leaders, and their respect for him, was what made that work.

Having said that, Bush Sr had no greater intelligence background than Panetta when Ford(?) appointed him director and the USSR was clearly a greater threat to the US at that time. As you pointed out Panetta benefits from having served as Chief of Staff to Clinton and in that role was certainly privy to intelligence information, sources, etc so it’s not like he isn’t aware of the benefits and role of the CIA.

I’m not convinced he was a good pick by Obama, but I am sure that picking someone who wasn’t from the CIA was a good move since the agency needs a shakeup. I think he should have taken an FBI counter-terrorism guy or something so they would have a more current picture of the world however while still being outside the old boys network.

The larger argument against Panetta would be his funding suggestions when Director of OMB. If he’s for a larger CIA operational budget and for increasing field intelligence (which I assume he is now) then I’ll feel better.

 

Lest We Forget

davo119 Tuesday, January 6th at 4:56AM EST (link)

Panetta was chief of staff from 1994 through 1997. Among other things the CIA and other intelligence agencies capabilities were severely curtailed.
http://archive.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2001/9/11/232727.shtml
It isn’t that he has no experience, the experience he does have is a threat to national security.

Never give in! Never! Never! Never!

 

There was a time

Deskpilot Tuesday, January 6th at 5:37AM EST (link)

, probably the whole campaign where I felt as though PEBO was a “Manchurian Candidate,” being manipulated by people like Soros and Daley. Well, obviously my thinking of BO puppet-mater was wrong. It’s non-other than Bill Clinton. In an administration so hell bent on change, the only thing that appears to be changing after 8 years of George Bush is the title of the political cronies from the Clinton Administration. And we all know what a detriment they were to the United States. Panetta is just another glaring example of the retreading of Clinton politics.
Who on Capitol Hill is going to have the stones to call this guy on his lack of experience in such crucial matters.
There’s and old Navy joke, Navy Intelligence is an oxymoron. Well that is certainly being re-evaluated now. Central Intelligence will be the moron.

If you can read this, thank a teacher. If you can still read it in English, You’re Welcome
Deskpilot, AM(H)1 (AW), USN (Ret)

 

How did this shill get the nod for DCI?

char Tuesday, January 6th at 10:20AM EST (link)

This is a catastrophe, he’ll just parrot what Obama wants to hear. I think that Obama has no clue when it comes to foreign policy and so he appoints people who he thinks are intelligent in these areas. I think he wants to make sure that foreign policy is not an issue for him because he has Hillary et al manning the posts.

 

Leave a Comment

 

Be respectful, or be banned. No Profanity.