Many are concerned with John Brennan's nomination to direct the CIA. Michael Scheuer gives a well-thought out rationale for finding a different candidate. It is not just that John Brennan seems ready to trample on civil liberties, but he does not even understand what is at stake in the Middle East.
This month, President Obama nominated John Brennan to be the next CIA
chief. Mr. Brennan was a longtime Agency officer and held a number of
senior appointments there. He also has held a number of senior positions
outside the Agency in the nation’s national security apparatus. One
might argue that all of these positions were based on Mr. Brennan’s
unvarying willingness to say “Yes, my genius leader” to anything his
boss of the moment said was a good idea. It also has been said that he
was thoroughly detested inside the Agency while working for DCI George
Tenet—primarily because his first question on the proposal of a covert
operation to protect Americans was always was “How will this impact on
Director Tenet’s reputation”—and for fully supporting the CIA’s
overwhelmingly successful rendition program while Messrs. Clinton and
Bush were in power, and then damning the Agency for the program and
helping to destroy it when he snuggled up to President Obama and his
consistently anti-CIA party. Indeed, there was a popular joke inside CIA
in the 1990’s which ran something like: “Question: Why is George Tenet
never photographed from behind? Answer: Because they have not found a
way to dislodge John Brennan’s nose.”
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