The
jihadists of radical Islam behave like the Hydra – the many-headed
water serpent of Greek mythology. When one of the Hydra’s heads was cut
off, two new heads would appear. Ultimately, Hercules was able to kill
the Hydra by cutting off all the heads and then setting fire to the
monster’s neck.
Now that the Surge is putting serious pressure on the
jihadists in Iraq, the jihadists are causing trouble in Afghanistan and
Pakistan. Unfortunately, our Judeo-Christian Hercules isn’t militarily
strong enough and cannot gain sufficient tactical intelligence to deal
with all the Hydra-like heads that keep popping up.
For those who see every glass as half-empty rather than
half-full, our situation vis-a-vis the Islamic terrorists is
abominable. Those who see every glass as half-full can point out that
the fighting is taking place in Iraq, in Afghanistan, in parts of
Pakistan and not here in the continental United States. Better over
there than over here.
If we had the will to create armed forces sufficient to be
everywhere at once and chop off the Hydra-heads the moment they erupt,
we would not need an effective, civilian intelligence-gathering agency
But if your armed forces are small, relative to the multiple threats
they must face, then an effective, civilian intelligence-gathering
agency is essential.
Unfortunately, our current ability to gather and analyze
actionable intelligence on a timely basis is virtually non-existent.
The harsh reality is that service in the embassies, consulates and CIA
stations across the Crescent of Islam is not very attractive to the
elitist Ivy-Leaguers who, at one time, wanted to join the diplomatic
corps or to serve abroad for the CIA.
So few Foreign Service Officers (FSOs) are willing to staff
our new embassy in Baghdad that some FSOs are being ordered to Baghdad
or else. Even the dullest FSO or CIA officer understands that learning
Arabic or Farsi or Hindu or Urdu or Punjabi is a one-way ticket to
places where hot showers and cold, vodka-martinis (shaken, not stirred)
are rare.
In Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA, author Tim Weiner opines, “To
succeed, the CIA [needs] to find men and women with the discipline and
self-sacrifice of the nation’s best military officers, the cultural
awareness and historical knowledge of the nation’s best diplomats, and
the sense of curiosity and adventure possessed by the nation’s best
foreign correspondents.”
While some of our foreign correspondents, such as Arnaud de
Borchgrave, are still willing to venture into some rather smelly
places, the kidnappings and even beheadings of some reporters by the
radical Islamists are creating “green-zone commandos” who, a la
Vietnam, stay inside the safe areas to interview each other over iced
drinks.
Having been deceived by the CIA more than once (for example,
WMD in Iraq), Vice President Dick Cheney and former Secretary of
Defense, Donald Rumsfeld, created a substitute CIA within the Office of
the Secretary of Defense (OSD). It remains to be seen if Rumsfeld’s
replacement, former CIA Director, Robert Gates, will take advantage of
the skilled and dedicated military intelligence personnel now available
to him.
For example, for at least 50 years, the Army’s Foreign Area
Officer (FAO) Program has produced officers with the discipline and
self-sacrifice needed to undergo years of language training plus
actual, in-country, cultural training and then go back to serve in many
of the world’s armpit countries.
The U.S. Army Special Forces “A” Teams are language- and
culture-trained to live side-by-side with the ordinary people of
third-world countries. Incredibly, at the time of 9/11, only a handful
of CIA officers could understand conversational Arabic.
We now face the Herculean task of producing a new generation
of intelligence officers and diplomatic corps personnel with the
discipline and self-sacrifice to match that of the American military.
Until that new generation can be recruited and trained, our chances
having a civilian intelligence agency capable of even finding the neck
of the Hydra-headed monster are somewhere between slim and none.
About
the Author:
Syndicated columnist and featured commentator for USA Today, William
Hamilton, is a member of the Association of Former Intelligence
Officers. Writing as William Penn, he and his wife are the co-authors
of The Grand Conspiracy and The Panama Conspiracy – two thrillers about
terrorism directed against the United States.
Posted on
Saturday, June 28, 2008
by William Hamilton, J.D., Ph.D