Porter J. Goss

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Porter Goss
Porter Goss

Porter Johnston Goss (born November 26, 1938) is an American politician, who was the last Director of Central Intelligence and the first Director of the Central Intelligence Agency following the passage of the IRPTA 2004 Act, which abolished the DCI position. A CIA operative in Latin America during the Cold War, he served as a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1989 until he took up his post at the agency. [1]

Goss represented the 14th congressional district of Florida, which includes Lee County, Fort Myers, Naples, and part of Port Charlotte. He served for a time as the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee. Goss was a co-sponsor of the USA PATRIOT Act and was a co-chair of the Joint 9/11 Intelligence Inquiry.

Goss resigned as Director of the CIA on May 5, 2006 in a sit-down press conference with President George W. Bush from the Oval Office[2] On May 8, 2006, Bush nominated USAF Gen. Michael Hayden to be Goss's successor.

According to a September 13, 2004 article in the Congressional newspaper Roll Call, Goss had a net worth of $16.1 million, including at least $500,000 in undeveloped real estate on Fishers Island, N.Y., where he is known to spend his summers and his Virginia farm (known as Retreat Farm) which is believed to be worth at least $1.3 million. Mr Goss is an avid organic farmer.[1]

Contents

[edit] Education and early CIA career

Goss was born in 1938 in Waterbury, Connecticut. He attended Camp Timanous in Raymond, Maine and was educated at Fessenden. In 1956 he graduated from the Hotchkiss School in Lakeville, Connecticut.

Goss went to Yale University, where he got his Bachelor of Arts majoring in ancient Greek. (Goss also speaks Spanish and French). He is believed to have been a member of the Book and Snake (1960), a secret society at Yale. He was a member of the Psi Upsilon fraternity alongside William H.T. Bush, the uncle of President George W. Bush, and John Negroponte, who served as an Ambassador for George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush, and as Goss's superior in the post of Director of National Intelligence from 2005 to 2006.[3] Interestingly, Negroponte solicited Goss's assistance, while Goss was Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, to get the position as US Ambassador at the UN in the first term of the Bush (43) Administration.

In his junior year at Yale, Goss was recruited by the CIA. He spent much of the 1960s--roughly from 1960 until 1971--working for the Directorate of Operations, the clandestine services of the CIA. There he first worked in Latin America and the Caribbean and later in Europe. The full details are not known due to the classified nature of the CIA, but Goss has said that he had worked in Haiti, Santo Domingo, and Mexico. A photograph taken in Mexico City in January 1963 allegedly shows Goss with his arm around Felix Rodriguez, at a table with Barry Seal and other CIA members of Operation 40.

Photo allegedly shows Porter Goss in 1963 in the company of Rodriguez, Seal, and others.
Photo allegedly shows Porter Goss in 1963 in the company of Rodriguez, Seal, and others.

Goss, who has said that he has recruited and trained foreign agents, worked in Miami for much of the time. Goss was involved in the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, telling the Washington Post in 2002 that he had done some "small-boat handling" and had "some very interesting moments in the Florida Straits."

Towards the end of his career as a CIA operative, Goss was transferred to Europe, where, in 1970, he collapsed in his London hotel room because of a blood infection in his heart and kidneys. Goss says he does not know that happened, but says that he was not poisoned. Some sources now say that Goss suffered a staph infection. In any case, his health was severely affected, and he retired from the CIA.

[edit] Government career

Goss began his political career in 1974, when he was elected to the Sanibel City Council and was elected mayor by the council. In 1983, Bob Graham, then Florida governor, appointed Goss to the Lee County Board of Commissioners.

Rep. Goss talks to the press.
Rep. Goss talks to the press.

In 1988 Goss ran for Congress in what was then the 13th Congressional District of Florida, encompassing Lee, Charlotte, and Sarasota counties. The seat was vacated by Connie Mack III when Mack ran successfully for the U. S. Senate. In the primaries Goss's main opponent was Louis A. "Skip" Bafalis, a former holder of that congressional seat, which Bafalis had previously relinquished during an unsuccessful campaign for the Florida governorship. Due to his name recognition, Bafalis was the favorite to win the race, however, he only garnered 29% of the vote in the primary to Goss's 38%, largely due to the fact that Goss's campaign was much better financed. Goss went on to defeat Bafalis handily in the run-off election. In the general election, Goss faced the former first president of Common Cause, Jack T. Conway. Goss had no trouble winning the general election in the heavily Republican district, and did not have any significant opposition in his seven subsequent elections, as he won them all with more than 70 percent of the vote, and in 2002 he ran unopposed.

He served in Congress for 16 years until his appointment by President George W. Bush to be Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). While in the House, Goss served as chair of the House Intelligence Committee from 1997 until 2005 and the Vice-Chairman of the House Rules Committee. He also helped establish and served on the Homeland Security Committee. As a congressman, Goss consistently and emphatically defended the CIA and supported strong budget increases for the Agency, even during a time of tight budgets and Clintonian slashes to other parts of the Intelligence budgets. In mid-2004, Goss took a very strong position, during what had already been announced as his last congressional term, urging specific reforms and corrections in the way the CIA carried out its activities, lest it become "just another government bureaucracy."

Goss has a consistently Conservative voting record, with the exception of his views towards the environment— Goss supported the Kyoto Protocol and strengthening the Environmental Protection Agency. Most of his major legislation has been intelligence authorization bills, with some local constituent-services bills.

The legislation he sponsored include: a constitutional amendment to establish term limits limiting representatives to no more than three consecutive terms of four years[4]. Major bills sponsored by Goss include a bill to limit Congressional pay raises to no more than Social Security cost-of-living adjustments[5] (unpassed), The Public Interest Declassification Act of 1999[6] (unpassed), and the USA PATRIOT Act.

[edit] Career timeline

  • CIA Director 22-Sep-2004 to 5-May-2006 (resigned)
  • U.S. Congressman, Florida 14th (3-Jan-1993 to 23-Sep-2004, resigned)
  • U.S. Congressman, Florida 13th (3-Jan-1989 to 3-Jan-1993)
  • Mayor Sanibel, FL (1981-82)
  • Mayor Sanibel, FL (1975-77)
  • CIA employee 1962-71
  • Council on Foreign Relations
  • Ripon Society

[edit] Intelligence inquiry: Sept. 11, 2001

In August 2001 Goss, Senator Bob Graham (D-Fl.), and Senator Jon Kyl visited Islamabad, Pakistan. Meetings were held with President Pervez Musharraf and with Pakistan's military and intelligence officials including the head of Pakistan’s Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) General Mahmoud Ahmad, as well as with the Afghan ambassador to Pakistan, Abdul Salam Zaeef. On the morning 11 September, 2001, Goss and Graham were having breakfast with General Ahmad.[7][8] Ahmad's network had ties to Osama bin Laden and directly funded, supported, and trained the Taliban[9]. They met with Musharraf and Zaeef on the 27th. As reported by Agence France Presse on August 28, 2001, Zaeef assured the US delegation that the Taliban would never allow bin Laden to use Afghanistan to launch attacks on the US or any other country. Goss fully defended the CIA and the Bush administration. With the White House and Sen. Graham, his counterpart in the Senate Intelligence Committee, Goss rebuffed calls for an inquiry in the weeks immediately following September 11.

After growing pressure, Congress established the Joint Inquiry into Intelligence Community Activities before and after the Terrorist Attacks of September 11, 2001, a joint inquiry of the two intelligence committees, led by Graham and Goss. Goss and Graham made it clear that their goal was not to identify specific wrongdoing: Graham said the inquiry would not play "the blame game about what went wrong from an intelligence perspective,", and Goss said, "This is not a who-shall-we-hang type of investigation. It is about where are the gaps in America's defense and what do we do about it type of investigation."[10]

The Washington Post reported statements made by Goss of May 17, 2002. Goss said he was looking for "solutions, not scapegoats." He called the uproar over the U.S. White House briefing on terror threats of August 6, 2001 "a lot of nonsense." He also said, "None of this is news, but it's all part of the finger-pointing. It's foolishness." The Post also reported that Goss refused to blame an "intelligence failure" for September 11, preferring to praise the agency's "fine work."(Washington Post, May 18, 2002, "A Cloak But No Dagger; An Ex-Spy Says He Seeks Solutions, Not Scapegoats for 9/11")

The inquiry's final report was released in December 2002 and focused entirely on the CIA and FBI's activities, including no information on the White House's activities. Ray McGovern, a 27-year veteran of the CIA and a frequent commentator on intelligence issues, believed the report showed that Goss gave "clear priority to providing political protection for the president" when conducting the inquiry.

Goss publicly declared his opposition to the creation of an independent 9-11 Commission. A year later, he declined to open committee hearings into the Valerie Plame leak, saying: "Somebody sends me a blue dress and some DNA, I'll have an investigation."

Goss chiefly blames President Bill Clinton for the recent CIA failures. He confided in a reporter: "The one thing I lose sleep about is thinking what could I have done better, how could I have gotten more attention on this problem sooner." When asked whether he ever brought up his concerns with the administration, Goss claimed he had met three times with President Clinton to discuss "certain problems." The upshot? "He was patient and we had an interesting conversation but it was quite clear he didn’t value the intelligence community to the degree President Bush does."

As Newsweek[11] and CNN[12] reported, in June 2004, while Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, in the face of withering attacks by the Democrats against the Bush Administration in a very tightly contested presidential and congressional election year, Goss defended the intelligence community and the Administration in decidedly partisan terms. During floor debate, fending off efforts by the Democrats in the House to cut the intelligence budget, Goss exposed the fact that Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), the Democratic presidential nominee, that Senator Kerry did not appreciate the critical need for robust and sustained support for the CIA and the Intelligence Community. Goss noted a 1977 quote of Kerry's arguing for intelligence budget cuts and calling Kerry's proposals on nuclear security "dangerously naive."

[edit] Director of CIA

Porter Goss addresses the media after President Bush nominated him to be the director of the CIA
Porter Goss addresses the media after President Bush nominated him to be the director of the CIA

Following the June 3, 2004 resignation of CIA director George Tenet, Goss was nominated to become the new director on August 10 by President George W. Bush. The appointment was challenged by some prominent Democrats, including former Vice President Al Gore, Sen. Robert Byrd (D-WV). Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV (D-WV), vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, expressed concerns that Goss was too politically partisan, given his public remarks against Democrats while serving as chairman of the House Intelligence Committee. Another Democratic member of the committee, Ron Wyden (D-OR), expressed concerns that given Goss's history within and ties to the CIA, he would be too disinclined to push for institutional change. In an interview carried out under false pretenses[citation needed] by Michael Moore's production company--an association that was not revealed to Goss or his press staff before the release of the movie Fahrenheit 9-11, on March 3, 2004 Goss described himself as "probably not qualified" for a job within the CIA, because the language skills the Agency now seeks are not languages he speaks and because the people applying today for positions within the CIA's four directorates have such keen technical and analytic skills, which he did not have when he applied to the Agency in the early 60s. (See below)

The U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee endorsed his nomination by a 12-4 vote on September 20, 2004, and on September 22 he was confirmed by the Senate in a rather lopsided 77-17 vote. Opposition to his nomination came entirely from the most partisan Democrats; the Republican senators unanimously backed him, along with many prominent Democrats, including the two Democratic senators from Florida, Bob Graham and Bill Nelson, and Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle.

[edit] Early Change Under Goss

Goss arrived as CIA Director on September 24, 2004. He had promised the US Senate that he would bring change and reform to the CIA. needed.

He brought with him five personal staff. Goss's chief of staff, Patrick Murray, is a former federal prosecutor who served as the House Intelligence Committee Chief Counsel for about 6 years, and as its staff director for the final year before coming to the CIA. Murray also was appointed by President George W. Bush to the position of Associate Deputy Attorney General at the Department of Justice from 2001-2003. He served on the Bush-Cheney Transition Team for the Intelligence Community in 2000 through the Inauguration. Goss's other staff included Dr. J. Jakub, who formerly served as a CIA DI analyst and was trained as an operations officer before leaving the Agency to attend Oxford University, where he obtained his D.Phil. He served on the House Intelligence Committee and for Senator Saxby Chambliss doing oversight work of the CIA and the Intelligence Community since 1998 before rejoining the CIA with Goss in October 2004. Merrell Moorhead worked for Goss for 10 years, seven of them on the House Intelligence Committee, including as the Committee's Deputy Staff Director, doing oversight and budgetary/programmatic work regarding the CIA.

Almost immediately upon Director Goss's arrival, Steve Kappes - the Director of Operations - and his subordinates began a series of confrontations that Michael Sulick, Kappes' then-deputy, and Kappes, had with Goss and his personal staff immediately upon their arrival at the CIA. Kappes was reported to have personally told DO officers that if they were seen or heard to be cooperating with the new DCI and his staff their careers would be over. Ultimately, Kappes, Sulick, and Deputy Director John McLaughlin were reported to believe that Goss would back down and they could continue to control the Agency.

It is reported in the press, perhaps inaccurately, touting Kappes reemergence at the CIA--that he quit the Agency rather than carry out a request by Goss to reassign Michael Sulick, his then deputy. It is also reported that this incident occurred because the chief of staff, Murray, admonished the then assistant deputy director for counterintelligence, Mary Margaret Graham (who now works for the DNI John Negroponte, and who herself reportdly disclosed the classified budget totals for the intelligence community without any disciplinary action being applied), about leaked classified information regarding another CIA officer.

Sulickwas reported to have  walked over to Murray and yelled "you ain't gonna [sic] treat me like some F...ING DEMOCRATIC HILL PUKE!".

Sulick left the Director's office, leaving Kappes standing there stony-faced. Murray then made the point that if that was the way Sulick was going to act with the DCI's chief of staff, Kappes needed to think about reassigning him, because that sort of relationship just could not be good for the CIA or the DCI.

A week later, Kappes and Sulick recognizing that Goss was going to protect his Hill staff, announced that they were quitting. John McLaughlin, the then Deputy Director of Central Intelligence, the man Goss believed started the whole series of events by appointing Kappes to the DDO position without consulting Goss, announced his departure just two days later. And, the media had a field day using well placed sources within the CIA and also "former" intelligence officials.

[edit] Resignation controversy

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President George W. Bush and Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte (left) accept Goss's resignation in the Oval Office on May 5, 2006.
President George W. Bush and Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte (left) accept Goss's resignation in the Oval Office on May 5, 2006.

On May 5, 2006 Goss' resignation from the CIA directorship was announced at a joint press briefing with President Bush at the White House. The resignation, which took place effective immediately, came as a surprise and there was speculation in the press concerning the reasons of the sudden announcement.

Goss disagreed with Negroponte's plans to decimate the CIA's capabilities. The Los Angeles Times reported "Goss was pushed out by Negroponte after clashes between them over Goss' management style, as well as his reluctance to surrender CIA personnel and resources to new organizations set up to combat terrorism and weapons proliferation."[13] Goss carried considerable integrity on the issues relating to the intelligence community, given his service as a CIA officer and as Chairman for 10 years on the House Intelligence Community. Negroponte for his part has only ever been an Ambassador, a consumer of intelligence, and really knew nothing about the complexities of the Intelligence Community when he took on the mantle of DNI. Goss made the point with Negroponte that pursuing the changes Negroponte desired, in the manner Negroponte was insisting upon, contradicted the intent of the Intelligence Reform legislation, which was to add to the capabilities of the existing agencies in the intelligence community, not to detract and diminish those existing capabilities. The Weekly Standard also noted that Goss wanted intelligence analysts to get more exposure to intelligence gathering and Negroponte planned to move them from the CIA over to DNI, further from intelligence gathering. While the editors of Weekly Standard sided with Goss in this dispute, they believe Goss was forced out for other reasons:

[W]e are concerned that Goss left, or was eased out, for reasons of greater policy significance. And if this is the case, Goss's leaving is not a good sign. Goss is a political conservative and an institutional reformer. He is pro-Bush Doctrine and pro-shaking-up-the-CIA.
John Negroponte, so far as we can tell, shares none of these sympathies. Negroponte is therefore more in tune with large swaths of the intelligence community and the State Department. If Negroponte forced Goss out and is allowed to pick Goss's successor--if Goss isn't replaced with a reformer committed to fighting and winning the war on terror, broadly and rightly understood--then Goss's departure will prove to have been a weakening moment in an administration increasingly susceptible to moments of weakness. [14]

Goss was replaced by Negroponte's Principal Deputy Director for National Intelligence, 4 star Air Force General, Michael Hayden.

Excerpt from the History of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence [15]

"The idea of a Director of National Intelligence (DNI) dates to 1955 when a blue-ribbon study commissioned by Congress recommended that the Director of Central Intelligence should employ a deputy to run the CIA so that the director could focus on coordinating the overall intelligence effort."

It was Hayden who was the Director of the National Security Agency at the time of the terrorist attacks on the US on 9-11-01. Recall that the NSA had intelligence in its possession marking 9-11 as "zero hour" but had not translated or reported that until days later. Also, note that Hayden's record as a reformer and change agent at NSA is met with mixed results. During his tenure as DIRNSA, the House and Senate Armed Services Committees revoked his independent acquisition and milestone authority because of his abject failure at moving major reform projects forward.

Robert Novak's May 11 column claimed "Goss faced a disintegrating CIA. The major analytic functions were passed to the DNI. Special operations were going over to the Pentagon. Negroponte was no help to Goss. Although bizarre reasons for Goss's resignation have been floated on the Internet, sources say Negroponte simply suggested his time was up."

While at CIA, Goss began to reverse the climate of fear and intimidation that had existed under the previous regime leadership. As he and others noted in numerous reports and writings on the risk aversion that "which is the last thing you want in an intelligence agency."[16]

On May 12, 2006, law enforcement officials executed search warrants on the house and office of CIA's executive director Kyle "Dusty" Foggo as part of an investigation into corruption involving bribery-convicted ex-Congressman Randy "Duke" Cunningham's coconspirator, defense contractor Brent Wilkes, who was a longtime associate of Foggo.[17] Goss had chosen Foggo for the position. It is not known whether the investigation into Foggo played a role in Goss's resignation.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Article I, Section 6 of the Constitution states that no member serving in the legislative branch of the government (that is, in the House or Senate) may serve in a civil service concurrently: Goss had to resign his House seat in order to assume office as the Director.
  2. ^ Jennifer Loven (May 5, 2006). CIA Director Porter Goss Resigns. Associated Press. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
  3. ^ Joshua Micah Marshall (May 7, 2006). Big world, small world.. Talking Points Memo. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
  4. ^ Proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the United States to provide for four-year terms for Representatives and to limit the number of consecutive terms Senators and Representatives.... Library of Congress (January 7, 1997). Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
  5. ^ To provide that an annual pay adjustment for Members of Congress may not exceed the cost-of-living adjustment in benefits under title II of the Social Security Act for that year.. Library of Congress (May 4, 1999). Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
  6. ^ Public Interest Declassification Act of 1999. Library of Congress (October 27, 1999). Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
  7. ^ Richard Leiby (May 18, 2002). A Cloak But No Dagger. Washington Post. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
  8. ^ Ward Harkavy (August 10, 2004). In the search for intelligence life, Porter Goss is strictly from hunger. Village Voice. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
  9. ^ Pakistan's support of the Taliban. Afghanistan: Crisis of Impunity: The Role of Pakistan, Russia, and Iran in Fueling the Civil War. Human Rights Watch (July 2001). Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
  10. ^ Patrick Martin (March 6, 2002). Further delay in US congressional investigation into September 11 attacks. World Socialist Web Site. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
  11. ^ Michael Hirsch; Michael Isikoff, Mark Hosenball (July 5, 2004). Secret Agent Man. Newsweek. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
  12. ^ David Ensor (June 24, 2004). Sources: Goss front-runner for CIA post. CNN. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
  13. ^ Greg Miller (May 7, 2006). CIA Chief's Ouster Points to Larger Issues. LA Times. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
  14. ^ Weekly Standard Editors (May 15, 2006). The Agency Problem. Weekly Standard. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
  15. ^ History of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. Office of the Director of National Intelligence. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
  16. ^ Walter Shapiro (May 6, 2006). Porter Goss' spooky demise. Salon. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
  17. ^ Mark Mazzetti; David Johnston (May 12, 2006). C.I.A. Aide's House and Office Searched. The New York Times. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Connie Mack, III
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Florida's 13th congressional district

January 1989–January 3, 1993
Succeeded by
Dan Miller
Preceded by
Harry Johnston
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Florida's 14th congressional district

January 3, 1993–September 23, 2004
Succeeded by
Connie Mack IV
Preceded by
Larry Combest
Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee
1997 – 2004
Succeeded by
Pete Hoekstra
Preceded by
George J. Tenet
Director of Central Intelligence
September 24, 2004April 21, 2005
Succeeded by
John Negroponte
(as DNI)
Director of the CIA
September 24, 2004May 5, 2006
Succeeded by
Michael Hayden