November 12, 2004
Former Chief of CIA's Bin Laden Unit
Leaves
By Dana Priest
Washington Post Staff Writer
Michael Scheuer, the author and former chief of the CIA's
Osama bin Laden unit, announced yesterday that he had
resigned from the agency so he could speak openly about
terrorism and what he sees as the government's failure to
understand the threat from al Qaeda.
"I have concluded that there has not been adequate
national debate over the nature of the threat posed by Osama
bin Laden and the force he leads and inspires, and the
nature of the intelligence reform needed to address that
threat," Scheuer, whom the CIA banned from speaking
publicly in July, said in a statement issued by his
publisher.
The agency allowed Scheuer to publish his book,
"Imperial Hubris," anonymously, and to conduct
media interviews to promote it under the name
"Mike." The book became a bestseller.
But he became a critic of the war in Iraq, saying it
inflamed anti-American sentiment among Muslims, and
eventually his name was published. After some White House
officials and pundits asserted that the CIA had allowed
Scheuer to act as its surrogate critic on the war, CIA
officials forbade him from speaking publicly.
Scheuer said in an interview with The Washington Post on
Monday that he believes the agency silenced him after CIA
officials realized he was blaming the CIA, not the
administration, for mishandling terrorism. "As long as
the book was being used to bash the president, they gave me
carte blanche to talk to the media," he said. "But
this is a story about the failure of the bureaucracy to
support policymakers."
The statement, issued in the name of Scheuer's publicist,
Christina Davidson, said Scheuer criticized the CIA
leadership for allowing "the clandestine service to be
scapegoated for pre-9-11 failures -- failure more properly
placed at the door of senior members of the U.S.
intelligence community and senior policymakers, for whom, in
Scheuer's view, saving lives has seldom appeared to be the
top priority."
Scheuer was chief of the CIA's bin Laden station from
1996 to 1999 and remained a counterterrorism analyst after
that. He could not be reached for comment yesterday.
The statement released by his publicist said that
"after a cordial meeting with senior CIA officials on
Tuesday, Scheuer decided that it would be in the best
interests of the intelligence community and the country for
him to resign in order to continue speaking publicly with
regard to Osama Bin Laden, al Qaeda, and the 9-11 Commission
Report."
A CIA spokeswoman declined to comment.
|