Obama's Blame Game Underscores U.S. Intelligence Problem
By: Rachel Marsden
In a nationally televised interview that aired Sunday, U.S. President Barack
Obama spoke of his director of national intelligence, James Clapper, the way a
manager at a fast-food joint would speak of a grill cook who just botched a
burger..
"Our head of the intelligence community, Jim Clapper," Obama said in an
interview with "60 Minutes," "has acknowledged that I think they underestimated
what had been taking place in Syria."
OK, so now what? Do we get a coupon for a free side of onion rings on our next
visit while Clapper is downgraded to deep-fry jockey?
When you're the commander in chief of the United States, downloading blame onto
anyone -- let alone someone you nominated yourself -- is just pathetic.
There is no way that Obama can feasibly claim to have underestimated the rise of
Islamic extremists in Syria when his administration has spent the past few years
arming and training Islamic mercenaries in the region for the explicit purpose
of conducting asymmetric warfare against the Syrian government. What did he
think was eventually going to happen?
It's one thing to single out Clapper for criticism on national television --
which is bad enough as a deflection of responsibility -- but the president
should have at least addressed some of the mitigating factors that go beyond a
single person.
Obama has missed nearly 60 percent of his daily intelligence briefings since
taking office in 2009, according to a new Government Accountability Institute
report. This means one of two things: Either the briefings are so useless that
Obama feels he can skip them and just copy someone's notes later, as if he were
in college, or he's knowingly missing some good intel and is now trying to blame
the professor for a failing grade in Syria 101.
If the White House website is indicative of Obama's top priorities, it's easy to
see why he might have overlooked the rise of the Islamic State.
"We must do more to fight Ebola," reads one presidential item. "We have a moral
obligation to lead the fight against carbon pollution," explains another. What's
the big deal about jihadists in the Middle East when there's a risk of extra
plant food (i.e., carbon dioxide) in the air, right?
Obama's possibly misplaced interests and priorities aside, legitimate problems
with U.S. intelligence go much deeper than a single scapegoat.
Let's start with the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. The largest embassy in the entire
history of the planet cost $750 million to build and is now located just one
hour away from the Islamic State's nearest stronghold. What exactly have the
thousands of people working and living in this city-like complex -- complete
with Olympic-sized pool, gym and other amenities -- been doing to keep tabs on
what's happening elsewhere in Iraq? The place sounds a lot like the sort of Las
Vegas resort hotel that offers little incentive to go outside and enter a desert
environment.
No doubt there are spies working there under official cover, theoretically
tasked with gathering intelligence about potential threats like the Islamic
State. But where is the incentive to go cultivate sources and gather
intelligence when air conditioning and ergonomic chairs beckon? To be effective,
spies need to be outdoor cats, kicking tires and flipping over rocks
relentlessly. How much of that was really going on in Iraq? Apparently, not
nearly enough to have disrupted the most brutal Islamic extremist network before
it overpowered the Iraqi army.
Another problem that seems to endlessly plague the U.S. intelligence community
is its own bureaucracy. In the wake of the terrorist attacks of September 11,
2001, there was much debate over the lack of coordination and
information-sharing between U.S. intelligence agencies. When the outcome of that
discussion resulted in the creation of the director of national intelligence (DNI)
position, critics argued that the intelligence agencies (like the National
Security Agency, for example) reporting to the Department of Defense instead of
to the DNI would result in a blind spot for the DNI -- particularly when the
trend is toward a greater reliance on technology over information collected from
human sources via more traditional tradecraft.
None of these issues are going to be addressed when a president can't seem to
see the forest for the trees -- whether overlooking the rise of the Islamic
State, or the glaring problems with the U.S. intelligence system.
COPYRIGHT 2014 RACHEL MARSDEN