|
This article originally provided by
Yahoo
May 5, 2006
CIA Director Porter Goss Resigns
By JENNIFER LOVEN, Associated Press Writer
CIA Director Porter Goss resigned unexpectedly Friday,
nudged from the helm of a spy agency still reeling from
intelligence failures before America's worst terrorist
attack and faulty information that formed the U.S. rationale
for invading Iraq.
The decision was the latest in a series of moves by
President Bush to shake up his team and reinvigorate his
second term. A successor to Goss could come as early as
Monday, a senior administration official said.
Making the announcement from the Oval Office, Bush said
Goss' tenure had been one of transition.
"He has led ably," Bush said, Goss at his side. "He has a
five-year plan to increase the analysts and operatives."
Goss said the trust, confidence and latitude that Bush
placed in him "is something I could have never imagined."
"I believe the agency is on a very even keel, sailing
well," Goss said. "I honestly believe that we have improved
dramatically."
The president said Goss' replacement would continue his
reforms.
"As a result, this country will be more secure," Bush
said. "We've got to win the war on terror, and the Central
Intelligence Agency is a vital part of the war. So I thank
you for your service."
When Bush nominated Goss in August 2004, in the midst of
the president's re-election campaign, he said he would rely
on the advice of the CIA officer-turned-politician on the
sensitive issue of intelligence reform.
"He knows the CIA inside and out," Bush said at the time.
"He's the right man to lead this important agency at this
critical moment in our nation's history."
Goss, a former congressman from Florida, head of the
House Intelligence Committee and CIA agent, had been at the
helm of the agency only since September 2004. White House
counselor Dan Bartlett praised Goss' character and said,
"This man has impeccable integrity."
Goss came under fire almost immediately, in part because
he brought with him several top aides from Congress, who
were considered highly political for the CIA.
He had particularly poor relations with segments of the
agency's powerful clandestine service. In a bleak
assessment, California Rep. Jane Harman (news, bio, voting
record), the Intelligence Committee's top Democrat, recently
said, "The CIA is in a free fall," noting that employees
with a combined 300 years of experience have left or been
pushed out.
Under Goss and the sweeping intelligence overhaul
Congress approved in December 2004, the CIA lost
considerable clout among U.S. spy agencies. With the
installation of the country's first national intelligence
director, John Negroponte, Goss no longer sat atop the 16
intelligence agencies. Negroponte took that role — and many
of the CIA director's responsibilities. That includes Bush's
morning intelligence briefings.
Goss also had some public blunders. In March 2005, just
before Negroponte took over, Goss told an audience at the
Ronald Reagan Presidential Library that he was overwhelmed
by the many duties of his job, including devoting five hours
out of every day to prepare for and deliver the presidential
briefings.
"The jobs I'm being asked to do, the five hats that I
wear, are too much for this mortal," Goss said. "I'm a
little amazed at the workload."
Goss has pressed for aggressive probes about leaked
information.
"The damage has been very severe to our capabilities to
carry out our mission," he told Congress in February, adding
that a federal grand jury should be impaneled to determine
"who is leaking this information."
Just two weeks ago, Goss announced the firing of a top
intelligence analyst in connection with a Pulitzer
Prize-winning story about a network of CIA prisons in
Eastern Europe. Such dismissals are highly unusual.
Negroponte, with the backing of the White House, raised
with Goss the prospect that he should leave, and the two
talked about that possibility, a senior administration
official said, speaking on condition of anonymity to provide
a fuller account of what happened.
Bush aides have been looking for ways to rescue his
presidency from sagging poll ratings and difficulties with
the Iraq war and his agenda in Congress.
The shake-up began with the resignation of Andrew Card as
chief of staff and his replacement by Joshua Bolten.
Other changes have included the replacement of press
secretary Scott McClellan with Fox News commentator Tony
Snow. The move means that an experienced conservative
television personality, who at times has been critical of
the president, is the public face of the White House.
McClellan's last briefing at the White House was Friday.
His final day isn't until next week, but the president is
traveling in Florida the first part of the week, meaning
McClellan would brief from the road.
Bush political aide Karl Rove kept his deputy chief of
staff title, but was stripped of day-to-day oversight of
policy coordination. That job was given to Joel Kaplan,
Bolten's former No. 2 when he was budget director. Bush also
named Rob Portman, a former six-term Republican congressman
from Ohio who now serves as U.S. trade representative, to
replace Bolten at the head of the Office of Management and
Budget.
The vacant job of domestic policy adviser has not yet
filled.
Other changes that have been expected included changes in
the White House lobbying shop run by Candida Wolff, the
expected departure of communications chief Nicolle Wallace,
whose husband recently moved to New York. Officials have
also done little to discourage speculation that Treasury
Secretary John Snow is leaving.
|