What did you guys think about the Tenet interview?

Chadman

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That was interesting, if nothing else. I'm sure liberals will latch on to some key statements he made (I certainly did), and conservatives will dismiss him as being at fault as much as possible. One thing is for sure, he gave a passionate interview, and stood up for himself and his people, good or bad. Curious what the rest of you thought that watched it.
 

StevieD

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That was interesting, if nothing else. I'm sure liberals will latch on to some key statements he made (I certainly did), and conservatives will dismiss him as being at fault as much as possible. One thing is for sure, he gave a passionate interview, and stood up for himself and his people, good or bad. Curious what the rest of you thought that watched it.
I am surprised nobody has commented on this. Personally,I think the guy should be hung for treason. Why it took him this long to come out is just another disgrace. His torture sequence is classic. Five times he says we do not torture then he goes on to explain why we do. What a loser. No wonder we are in the mess we are in with guys like this running around.
 

The Sponge

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I actually thought the slam dunk comment never happen so i was surprised it did but of course the Cheney's of the world spun it to mean much more than it did. He admitted the Cheney's of the world wanted to go into Iraq even before 9/11. Hopefully now after the hundredth guy has come forward the american people will believe it now.
I waited and waited and waited for King to say something about Valerie Plame and he say's nothing. I would think this would be one of the first things he would ask. I would like to hear Tenet's opinion on this because i can't think he is happy about it. You could tell he has a dislike for Cheney. The one thing he did say which i said a thousand times is the terrorist don't work on our time table so all this garbage the right likes to say about how we haven't been attack since the last time on their watch means we are safer is just that garbage. Tenet say's the terrorist are very patient but you can't tell that to Weasal and DTB
 

danmurphy jr

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I agree w/SD, the schmuck made millions, got the Medal of Freedom, whatever the f**k that is and is now pimping a book. 3000+ Americans are dead, more than 20,000 are maimed and the Bush Holocaust goes on for another 10 years.
 

DOGS THAT BARK

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I kinda like Tenet myself--especially when he got terse with the guy from 60 minutes that repeatedly kept asking about interrogation methods--wish he could have named the 20 terrorist attacks averted by methods of interrogation--vs the attornet terrorist privlidge affored in last admin--would have also liked video of
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed when captured and they told him he was not going to New york and would not have an attorney present.

so we can all come away with points we like--but both sides need to remember interviews and book sales must be taken with grain of salt.

you can even get out of preface of book till 1st whopper is discovered---

Former CIA Chief George Tenet writes in his just-released book that on the day after 9/11 he met with Pentagon adviser Richard Perle.

"He said to me, 'Iraq has to pay a price for what happened yesterday, they bear responsibility.'" But Bill Kristol notes in The Weekly Standard: "Richard Perle was in France on that day, unable to fly back after September 11. In fact Perle did not return to the United States until September 15."

This morning Tenet told NBC's "Today Show": "I may have been off by a couple of days. The encounter occurred. The conversation occurred."

But Perle "categorically denies" ever having mentioned Iraq to Tenet in the days after 9/11.
 

The Sponge

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you can even get out of preface of book till 1st whopper is discovered---

Former CIA Chief George Tenet writes in his just-released book that on the day after 9/11 he met with Pentagon adviser Richard Perle.

"He said to me, 'Iraq has to pay a price for what happened yesterday, they bear responsibility.'" But Bill Kristol notes in The Weekly Standard: "Richard Perle was in France on that day, unable to fly back after September 11. In fact Perle did not return to the United States until September 15."

This morning Tenet told NBC's "Today Show": "I may have been off by a couple of days. The encounter occurred. The conversation occurred."

But Perle "categorically denies" ever having mentioned Iraq to Tenet in the days after 9/11.

Yeah big whopper dog. I put on Fox last night for ten minutes and this is all they talked about. Do you ever get any news from any where else? Is this all they could come up with? This huge whopper? How about we put this pig Pearl under a lie detector and see if he really said it. I will pay you ten to one odds he is lying like all these scumbags. What is a few days? The point is the creep said it and they wanted to go to war way before 9/11 to feed their little greedy agenda. But once again you fell for the Fox spin. Insanity at its best.
 

DOGS THAT BARK

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Yep Spongie --had you not heard it on Fox you probably would have never known--

Now that fact (which you refer to as spin) is quite relevant.

If you want to go through life making assumptions without pertinant facts--I suggest you view one sided news outlets and blogs

however--nice to know to stepped out for 10 minutes for some other views--and discover facts that might make you reconsider. :)
 

Chadman

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Interesting post, Wayne. You nailed one of the points you can imagine I latched on to in his interview, and I would like to know which one is closer to the truth.

One thing that is alarming to me, running right down the line with some of these people in charge of such important things - how bad or imprecise their memory is from time to time. Getting to the point where the only person I think is qualified to run anything of importance in this country would be my attorney wife. I guarantee you she would both be honest and not forget a darn thing.

I agree with your point of liking Tenet, I felt the same way. Of course there is the grain of salt book thing...but he seemed fairly genuine and fiercely loyal - probably to a fault. The way he explained things seemed to be sensible to me...a lot of people at fault, including himself, and not understanding how some things came about.

Sponge, FYI, Tenet did speak on the Plame thing - of course Pelley prompted him on this issue - and was outspoken in his criticism of Plame being outed. He mentioned her as one of his agents, which is an important point, and the big picture of a CIA agent being dealt with that way and what it does to the confidence of other agents and the organization.

Wayne, I really do believe a part of Tenet's essay on Pearle and Iraq. Obviously, Tenet felt pretty strongly about Bin Laden and our needs to get him after trying to keep tabs on him for so many years, and when asked about pulling away from Bin Laden to go to Iraq he was understandably disappointed and did not understand why. I still maintain - and have asked opinions on this in two other threads with no response - this is absolutely the important point to make in dealing with terrorism. We have little credibility and have added to our own problems by allowing Bin Laden to be a rallying force in worldwide terror, especially so soon after he attacked us and killed our people. Tenet knows this, as much as anyone does, and it sure came out honestly in that interview.
 

StevieD

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If you believe the administration line the information Bush received from Tenet was wrong.

We are thrust into a war for apparently no reason. Thousands of Americans lose their lives, 10's of thousands more are maimed.

Tenet receives the Medal of Honor.

And you guys like him?

He says we don't torture then goes on to explain why we do. The guy is a whack job. Should be behind bars not doing a book tour.
 

Chadman

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Stevie, I do my best to look at each situation individually, and think things through on my own. I think it's a cop out to use a big paintbrush and paint a picture of an entire group as one big layer.

Tenet really was not one of the in-crowd when it comes to the Bush administration, I don't think. He was around before they grabbed hold, and had his own ideas about world events and characters.

To say that I liked him probably is not accurate, though. I liked the way he acted in his interview, and I liked the way he seemed to be forthright and passionate during it. And I really liked the way he stood up for the people of the CIA, whom he directed. That seemed to fly in the face of the Bush administration, and I don't consider him a player of the same games that they do and did.

The Medal of Honor was not something he asked for, and was done more as a show for Bush, IMO. Another example of Bush trying to look good, and then sacrificing someone at their own expense when the heat gets too close to the Oval Office.
 

DOGS THAT BARK

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Chad I like several things about tenet--the main one is he is passionate in his beliefs--he certainly didn't come off as a wishy washy on 60 minutes.

--and his error on timelines I certainly wouldn't lay to deliberate deception--would say chances good it was simple error on timeline. will give him benefit of doubt unless numerous others crop up.

Thinks for heads up AR --will check it out also.
 

StevieD

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Chad I like several things about tenet--the main one is he is passionate in his beliefs--he certainly didn't come off as a wishy washy on 60 minutes.

--and his error on timelines I certainly wouldn't lay to deliberate deception--would say chances good it was simple error on timeline. will give him benefit of doubt unless numerous others crop up.

Thinks for heads up AR --will check it out also.
Yes, he has made an error or two in his day.
 

The Sponge

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Sponge, FYI, Tenet did speak on the Plame thing - of course Pelley prompted him on this issue - and was outspoken in his criticism of Plame being outed. He mentioned her as one of his agents, which is an important point, and the big picture of a CIA agent being dealt with that way and what it does to the confidence of other agents and the organization.

QUOTE]

Chad who is Pelley? I just saw the King interview. He did mention Scooter keep quiet Libby but that was it. I will check out Oreilly if i rememeber later tonight on the replay but i will guarantee you he will not ask this question and if he does it will be in and out.
 

Chadman

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Dang, completely forgot about O'Reilly interview last night. Anyone see it/care to comment? That one could have been a good one.

Sponge...Pelley was the interviewer on 60 minutes, very tenacious. I first became aware of him when he was in Iraq during the first war there...he was one of the frontliners for CBS and impressed me at that time. Probably the closest thing to Mike Wallace I've seen in a while.

AR-Vikings draft - I was pretty happy with it overall, although going on record as originally wanting them to take D. Jarrett in round 2 over the Rice WR from South Carolina. Although the more I've heard on both since then, perhaps they knew what they were doing. Personally I wanted Landry for them to really solidify what I think will be a good defense, before starting on the offensive needs - which there are/were plenty. But when he was gone, clearly Peterson was the pick, and he should be a great player for them if the shoulder isn't a chronic thing. Most aren't, but never know. I liked what they did on day two with drafting seemingly good players from big schools (DE from Texas and the Big 12 defensive player of the year at LB later). All in all, much better than they have done in like, ever...lol.
 

AR182

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chad....

here is a partial transcript of tenant's interview with o'reilly...when i get a chance i will comment on it....


Former CIA Director George Tenet Talks with Bill O'Reilly
Thursday , May 03, 2007


This is a partial transcript from "The O'Reilly Factor," May 2, 2007, that has been edited for clarity.

BILL O'REILLY, HOST: From 1997 to 2004, George Tenet was right in the middle of the two biggest stories in contemporary America, 9/11 and the Iraq War. Unfortunately, we are a divided country right now. And what happened on 9/11, and what's occurring in Iraq have become subjects of propaganda, deceit, and ideological hatred. In short, it's very hard to get the truth.

It is my job to try to get you a clear picture of what is actually happening in the war on terror to separate fact from fiction. Obviously, it's not an easy job. But with George Tenet whose new book is "At the Center of the Storm: My Years at the CIA", I went in with a very specific game plan. And here's how it played out:

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

O'REILLY: So Mr. Tenet, you ready for a little coerced interrogation here?

GEORGE TENET, FMR. CIA DIRECTOR: Absolutely, Bill.

O'REILLY I hope it doesn't descend into torture.

TENET: Let's hope not.

O'REILLY: Yes, it may.

TENET: You know, we don't torture.

O'REILLY: We're going to get to that. I'm going to get to that, because I don't know what torture is to you guys and that's what I want to find out. But I want our audience to ask the questions to you that they're asking me. And that's what I want to do. I'm not looking to bash you and make you look like an idiot. I'm not looking to do that. I'm not looking to take phone calls from Boise, Idaho. OK?

These are questions that go to me.

TENET: Sure.

O'REILLY: All right? Because where I live ? and your brother lives in the same area ? we've got scores of families still devastated from 9/11. And we got little kids walking around, they don't know where mom and dad is. All right?

Now from reading your book, neither President Clinton nor President Bush would give the order to the CIA to kill Usama bin Laden. Is that true and why would they not give the order?

TENET: Well, Bill, killing is something that we all ? everybody talks about this concept today as if it's the only way to do business. You know, we live ? the Central Intelligence Agency and covert authorities that are provided to us by the president of the United States have always been handled very judiciously and very delicately, over the course of time and history.

O'REILLY: Here's what I'm talking about. President Ford allowed the CIA to assassinate. He signed an executive order. OK? So presidents can do that.

I don't know whether you saw it, but Bill Clinton was grilled by Chris Wallace on this network. Why didn't you do more to get him? Why didn't you do more to get him? And the president said that he tried to kill him.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

FORMER PRESIDENT BILL CLINTON: I worked hard to try to kill him. I authorized the signing for the CIA to kill him. We contracted with people to kill him. I got closer to killing him than anybody's gotten since.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

O'REILLY: In your book, you said Attorney General Janet Reno told you trying to kill Bin Laden was illegal.

TENET: Bill, how we interpreted the authorities we were provided ? throughout that time period ? we understood that if he was killed in the context of a capture operation, that was OK. Nobody ever said you can simply go out and kill him. That never happened. Now...

O'REILLY: Was Clinton being disingenuous?

TENET: ...no, well, his interpretation ? here's the point I'm trying to make. If I could have killed him, I said to the 9/11 Commission, if I thought I had the data, if I thought I had enough access, I would have said look, let's change these authorities.

O'REILLY: The hard truth is you didn't get him in time. And I have to go back to your part in the book where Janet Reno, the attorney general, told you killing Bin Laden was illegal in her opinion. That's true, right?

TENET: Bill, it's true. Bill, can I say something to you?

O'REILLY: Absolutely.

TENET: We live in a country where the laws matter. We live in a country ? look before 9/11, the political and legal framework we lived in...

O'REILLY: I got it.

TENET: OK. So from my perspective as director, you just need to understand something. From my perspective as director, tell me what the legal framework is, tell me what the policy framework is , I'm going to do my level best.

After 9/11, everybody's rules changed. And you know, authorities start falling? now five years later, five years later everybody ? well nothing's happened in five years, right? People ? what does Bin Laden think? What does he think?

O'REILLY: Right now in American history, there's a propaganda war about Usama bin Laden and Iraq. The left, the Bush lied crew. All right? Bush is one line and you and the Bush administration and the Clinton administration to some extent, pushes another line.

And I'm trying to cut through the fog here, Mr. Tenet. It's not easy. I've got a president of the United States telling Chris Wallace in the most emphatic fashion that he tried to kill him. I tried to kill him. I got your book saying, no, they wanted to capture him. And if he got killed, OK. What's the truth?

TENET: The truth is almost all the authorities that we were provided, are, as I described them, OK. I understand the word "kill." The word "kill" is what everybody wants to talk about.

O'REILLY: I don't think President Clinton or nor President Bush ordered you guys to kill him. That's what I'm getting from almost everybody I talked to.

You had a meeting with Condoleezza Rice in July of 2001, two months before 9/11. [CBS News'] Scott Pelley asked you, OK, you say you told Condoleezza Rice the danger was imminent, we're going to get hit.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

SCOTT PELLEY, "60 MINUTES" CORRESPONDENT: Why aren't you telling the president, Mr. President, this is terrifying, we have to do this now. Forget about the bureaucracy, we got to ? I need this authority this afternoon?

TENET: Because the United States government doesn't work that way.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

O'REILLY: I thought that was weak.

TENET: Well, Bill, it's the way I did ? you know, that particular briefing that I marched down the hall ? I'm sure Condi went down the hall and talked to him about it.

O'REILLY: But you should have done it.

TENET: And I started talking about imminent threat in May.

O'REILLY: But you should have talked...

TENET: I know the president understood my concerns. I knew the entire government understood about my concerns. I knew everybody understood how concerned I was.

O'REILLY: I would have been in there banging that table.

TENET: Yes, you know, I banged every table in town. I was the guy who had his hair on fire that summer. I had my hair on fire for good cause.

O'REILLY: But then it's President Bush's fault if you were banging the table.

TENET: It's not ? the table.

O'REILLY: And he didn't ? well, nothing was elevated.

TENET: Listen, listen.

O'REILLY: Nothing was elevated.

TENET: Listen. See this is, you know, policy across two administrations, policy law enforcement. Bill, listen...

O'REILLY: I know there was no coordination.

TENET: Listen, Bill. Well, we worked our hearts out. The country was unprotected. We didn't have a system of internal protection. Our visas, our borders, everything was out of ? you could walk in any time you wanted to.

Look, Bill, you know, I say in the book, those families deserve more than they got from all of us.

O'REILLY: You were right. You were right.

TENET: But...

O'REILLY: You should have screamed it loud. You should have called me. I would have screamed it.

TENET: No, well, maybe we should have talked about this publicly. But, Bill, you know, of course, the president ? you know, the president's the one who asked "Well could they come here?" We wrote...

O'REILLY: It's not that about that. You said they're coming here and they're going kill a lot of people.

TENET: We ? no, we didn't say ? we didn't know they were coming here, Bill. We didn't understand it. We said.

O'REILLY: A threat is imminent?

TENET: Imminent, multiple, spectacular attacks.

O'REILLY: Come on...

TENET: They want to destroy the United States. Well, Bill, if I knew they were coming here, and I knew how it was going to happen, I would have stopped them.

O'REILLY: You didn't know it was going to happen, but you knew it was coming.

Now let's move it ahead to 9/11, and then Tora Bora, we go in. I didn't know this. And this is fascinating. The CIA led the overthrow of the Taliban. You're in charge of the military campaign. I didn't know that.

TENET: Well, not in charge of it. We worked very closely with...

O'REILLY: You were strategizing it.

TENET: We laid down the strategy...

O'REILLY: Right.

TENET: We were locked at the hip with our special operators.

O'REILLY: And you were successful?

TENET: And we were successful.

O'REILLY: Except for Tora Bora, all right, which is where Bin Laden escaped.

Now the Bush lied crew is oh, they let him go, they're incompetent idiots. All right, you say you just ? it was impossible to get him.

TENET: Look, everybody's all over this. And here's how it happened. We thought he was out there. We played with what we had on the ground. We were relying on tribal assets in fairness to my guys on the ground. You know, we now know in looking back to all this history, they wanted more people to show up.

O'REILLY: Could Gen. Tommy Franks have gotten you more people? .

TENET: Well, Tommy felt at the time in discussion with our guys, he felt it's going to take too long. Look, we didn't go to Afghanistan with a big footprint.

O'REILLY: No, if you had more time.

TENET: It may have taken weeks and we didn't ? and Tommy didn't think we had the time. A decision was made. We played with what we had. If you look at this terrain, Bill.

O'REILLY: I know. It's inhospitable.

TENET: It's almost - so here we are in an operational environment, that's what happens. Do all of us wish we got him? Absolutely. The reality we were dealing with, the number of people we could get there quickly. I don't know when he left. We know he left. And that's what happened.

O'REILLY: OK.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

O'REILLY: Continuing now with former CIA Director George Tenet, the author of the brand new book "At the Center of the Storm."

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

O'REILLY: Now I'm sitting there and I'm watching Colin Powell in front the U.N. And who's behind him? You.

TENET: Right.

O'REILLY: And he's laying out with tape recordings and satellite photos and everything. And I'm believing it.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

SECRETARY OF STATE COLIN POWELL: Our conservative estimate is that Iraq today has a stock pool of between 100 and 500 tons of chemical weapons agent.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

O'REILLY: I'm telling my audience I believe Powell.

TENET: Right.

O'REILLY: Because I know Powell. I know a little bit about you. And I'm saying there's no way that these guys are so insane to go in front of the world and lie. They're just not going to do it. All right?

TENET: Well, lie is not what we did, Bill.

O'REILLY: OK.

TENET: Lie as bad word, Bill.

O'REILLY: Just keep in mind the Bush lied crowd. How big it is in America. How big it is overseas. How that's taken on a life of its own. Keep that in mind because that's hurting us today.

OK, so Powell is doing all of this stuff. And he's saying that they have these deadly weapons. And we're afraid that they're going to hand them off to terrorists ? Al Qaeda and everybody else ?and this guy better open up the inspectors. He better let them in, or we're going to move him out.

Now if you had found the WMDs, we'd be heroes today, I believe, in the world's eyes. And that was a turning point in America.

TENET: We believed he [Saddam Hussein] had weapons of mass destruction.

O'REILLY: You believed it why? Specifically, you?

TENET: I believed it going back to my time in the Clinton administration when we were concerned about Iraq. I believed on the basis of ten years of following it, data that we'd seen, his deception, his denial, his thwarting of the U.N. I believed it in my core that he had them.

Here's a guy that basically, you know, here's a guy that basically was going to have his country destroyed because he didn't ? he wasn't honest about it.

O'REILLY: All right, so you as director of the Agency...

TENET: Listen, Bill, I believed it.

O'REILLY: ..over years. You believed it with every fiber of your body.

TENET: I believed it.

O'REILLY: And you told the president. And you sat there behind Powell.

TENET: Yes.

O'REILLY: OK. Mistake, everybody makes them. The Bush lied crowd basically is putting out there that there was no reason to go into Iraq, other than Bush's venality for whatever reason they ascribe some.

In your book, you say that a top Al Qaeda lieutenant Zarqawi, who was killed in Iraq subsequently, was given safe harbor in Iraq, and then ran operations in the northern part of that country for Al Islam.

TENET: Well, so let's deconflict all this and put it all in its proper context. I didn't mean to interrupt you.

O'REILLY: Yes, go ahead.

TENET: Let's put it in context.

O'REILLY: Zarqawi first.

TENET: There are three pieces that caused us concern: Contacts, training, safe haven. We've seen contacts for a long time. There was an issue of training. The one issue that concerned us was this fellow that we captured, Ibin Sheikh al Libby, who was an Al Qaeda senior operational trainer told us that they may have acquired some chemical training from the Iraqis. We believed that. And then we have Zarqawi. So the three pieces.

O'REILLY: Well, did Zarqawi go from the battlefield in Afghanistan to Baghdad?

TENET: Well, I ? he shows up in Baghdad in May of 2002.

O'REILLY: He shows up.

TENET: Where he comes from, I don't know. He shows up. So we document 3 areas of concern. Here's where we could not take you. Here's where the problem emerges.

We cannot take you to Iraqi complicity, authority direction or control for any terrorist act that Al Qaeda has committed. We make those distinctions clear.

The problem area that I document in the book is we had concern about areas ? there was enough to be concerned about ?and the concern is some people try to take it farther than it deserved and tried to create command linkages where they didn't exist.

O'REILLY: OK.

TENET: So I parsed it for you. And there were these areas of concern. And we separated away from authority direction and control that we don't think existed.

O'REILLY: OK, but if you believe The New York Times, there was absolutely no link at all between Saddam and Al Qaeda.

TENET: Link. Here's what you can't prove, Bill, in our business. And link says there's some connection here, now...

O'REILLY: Well, Zarqawi's there. You don't just go there.

TENET: So you and I, right, we're street smart guys. My operational presumption at the time was he shows up in Baghdad.

O'REILLY: You just don't show up in Baghdad.

TENET: Right. And they thought they had a good environment. But when you say link, when you say control, when you say command. You say these linkages.

O'REILLY: All right.

TENET: So keep the story straight, Bill. Here are our concerns...

O'REILLY: Right.

TENET: ...don't take the story farther. Don't make it more than it needs to be. And there's where the tension came in. But you can't ignore the front end. I think the chapter here says to you look, there were some areas of legitimate concern.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

O'REILLY: In our final segment tonight with former CIA director George Tenet, we take a look at the mess in Iraq.

I still believe it was a noble effort to try to bring the Iraqis freedom. I still believe the U.S. military has performed magnificently.

But like you, I just don't understand why things were not better planned out. George Tenet explains some of this in his book, "At the Center of the Storm," but not enough. So I called him on it:

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

O'REILLY: We go in, all right, everybody in the country is behind it, except the kooks.

TENET: I don't know about kooks, Bill.

O'REILLY: Believe me, at that point, it was running 80/85 percent.

TENET: OK, anyway.

O'REILLY: In the polls.

TENET: Go ahead.

O'REILLY: OK. Now we overthrow him. The military campaign goes well. You didn't run the campaign. The Pentagon did. And he's done. And he's out.

But you know what I saw? I saw the night the statue went down, Iraqis looting the armories with nobody stopping that. And I went whoa. What's that all about? And it doesn't seem that there was any kind of plan to secure the country after you got him.

TENET: When you plan a war, you have to transition from war fighting, to conflict termination, to peacekeeping and stabilization. And we needed to have an integrated plan from beginning, middle, to end.

O'REILLY: But you didn't.

TENET: We didn't.

O'REILLY: Who's at fault?

TENET: The government didn't. Well, look, fault, you know.

O'REILLY: Is that your fault?

TENET: Well, listen, let's not get into fault.

O'REILLY: Why not? I mean don't people have a right to know?

TENET: Well, you guys love laying blame. Let's just look at what happened here. Shinseki was probably right. You didn't have enough people on the ground. And then in the way we went about the post war reconstruction period, what did we do? We disbanded the army. We de-Baathified the country. We told the Sunni population essentially..

O'REILLY: But did you tell the president that was good to do that?

TENET: Absolutely not. And Bill, the point I make in the book, well of course we didn't know that that's how this was going to come down before it happened.

O'REILLY: But you saw it, you saw it coming down.

TENET: Yes, Bill. And once it came down, our reporting from Baghdad beginning in July consistently told the story of we have a problem here.

O'REILLY: And nobody in the Pentagon listened?

TENET: Well, you know, it's not just about the Pentagon.

O'REILLY: Well, who else would it be about? They're running the show.

TENET: Yes, they're running the show. And all I can say is I say, Bill, is I say at the end, you know, there's a system here.

O'REILLY: OK, so you're telling me.

TENET: There's a process...

O'REILLY: You're telling me.

TENET: Look, Bill..

O'REILLY: ...that you warned them that there was no cogent plan to stabilize the country?

TENET: Bill, no, Bill. What? No, we told them what intelligence people tell them. We don't comment on policy. But once we got on the ground, we said look, we have an insurgency that's brewing.

O'REILLY: Let's get back to the folks, now. They don't understand why if ...

TENET: Let me explain this.

O'REILLY: .you weren't telling them.

TENET: Let me explain this.

O'REILLY: .there's chaos and nothing happens.

TENET: Well, Bill, all I can tell you is, is all I can tell you is the data's available. People may have different data points. People may look at this differently. But at the end of the day what consistently is reported reflects the reality of what's going on on the ground. Nobody can walk away from that. So we go to Afghanistan, right. We find Karzai. We never had a Karzai. We legitimize from the ground up. From the locality.

O'REILLY: But that was your operation.

TENET: Well, just let's not say mine and theirs. Culturally...

O'REILLY: But it's a CIA operation.

TENET: Right. So you get ? but you get to Iraq and essentially the thought process ? we're going to go from the top down.

O'REILLY: All right.

TENET: We're not going to let Iraqis.

O'REILLY: I can only extrapolate. Do you like that word, extrapolate? I can only extrapolate.

TENET: It's big word for the Long Island guy.

O'REILLY: Right. And I'm big guy.

TENET: Right.

O'REILLY: That the Pentagon screwed up.

TENET: Listen.

O'REILLY: Because you can't four years later look...

TENET: Bill.

O'REILLY: ...look back on the chaos that we're looking at now.

TENET: Bill, can I say something to you?

O'REILLY: Nothing worked.

TENET: Bill, can I say something to you? This should have been fixed earlier that it was.

O'REILLY: But it wasn't. And now this is one of the biggest disasters in our foreign policy.

TENET: It's a difficult time for all of us at the moment.

O'REILLY: Right. OK.

TENET: It's a difficult equation.

O'REILLY: OK. Now let's get to the president.

TENET: OK.

O'REILLY: This Iraq thing has changed everything in America, because it's divided the country to the extent that the hatreds are so palpable.

TENET: Right.

O'REILLY: All right, people hate you. They hate me. They hate, you know, across the board. And I'm saying that we're still in great danger. Because our enemies, the jihadists, primarily Iran, a few others, they see the weakness in the country. They see the division that's been caused over Iraq. And they're going to go in and they're going to exploit that division. Do you believe most Americans understand the threat that, just like in the early 90s and mid-90s, is brewing over there? This time it's Iran. Back then it was Al Qaeda.

TENET: Bill, let me come back to this Iranian piece, because I want you to be careful here. I want you to be ? we have an Iranian problem. There is a nuclear program that we should be concerned about. And their support of Hezbollah that we should be concerned about.

Let's also make sure we understand that at this moment in time ? personal view ? you don't want to fight Sunni and Shia Islams simultaneously. Don't think that's very, very smart. And there's another thing we better think about very, very carefully.

There's a foreign jihadists piece of this, to be sure. But this is a domestic problem we're dealing with. Just...

O'REILLY: So you don't believe Iran is as big a problem as some are portraying it.

TENET: Well, of course it is, Bill, but let's handle one thing at a time.

O'REILLY: I don't know if you can.

TENET: Well, Bill, how would you handle it then?

O'REILLY: If Iran is going to subvert the government of Iraq.

TENET: Hold on a minute...

O'REILLY: ...how are you ever going to stabilize it?

TENET: You've got a number of ? well, Bill, maybe it's time for us to look at the Syrians in the eye, and look at the Iranians in the eye, and bring that region together, and sit down and have some straight talk about how we're going to get out of this together.

The important thing from my perspective here is, Iraq is a problem you have to make bigger. Because the region is at risk. It's not just about Iraq any more. So there's a lot of danger out there. It's also a time for adroit diplomacy, strategy, big thinking.

O'REILLY: OK now, you are still the CIA director today.

TENET: I'm not.

O'REILLY: You tell Bush this is a hypothetical.

TENET: I'm not. I don't want to be. I've had enough.

(LAUGHTER)

O'REILLY: This is a hypothetical. You're still the CIA director today. Do you tell Bush to no more surge, to pull back, to redeploy, to let them fight it out among themselves in Iraq. What do you tell him?

TENET: Look, I don't know what.

O'REILLY: Come on, you must have thought about it. You're up to your neck in it.

TENET: You know, the answer is is I don't know because here's what I would watch very, very carefully. Have American forces become such an issue that Iraqis are no longer capable of making decisions they need to make for themselves?

Look, you've got some responsibility. You need to as quickly as possible transition away from being in the front. We can give them command control, intelligence support, and training. And they have to pick up responsibility.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

O'REILLY: All right. I learned a lot from reading Mr. Tenet's book. And we appreciated him coming in. We might use a little bit more of that tomorrow on our show.
 

AR182

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some ramblings about the interview....

first i tend to be suspicious of an interview of somebody trying to sell a book...

but i can't believe how inept the people are that look out for the well being of the american people....it really pisses me off...

first we have clinton saying that he ordered osama to be killed...then we have the head of the cia basically disagreeing with that...so who is telling the truth ?

then tenet says that there were'nt enough troops in afghanistan to capture osama at tora bora...why not ?

tenet also said that he went to rice right before 9/11 & said that an attack against the u.s. was imminent...but nothing was done to try to prevent it...why not ?

tenet also said that he believed that sadam had wmds.....his quote..." I believed it going back to my time in the Clinton administration when we were concerned about Iraq. I believed on the basis of ten years of following it, data that we'd seen, his deception, his denial, his thwarting of the U.N. I believed it in my core that he had them." this verifies what woodward said in his book....that he was present when tenet told bush that the wmds were a slam dunk...

question.....when the head of the u.s. spy agency tells the president this....shouldn't the pres. believe him without question ?

as far as the alqaeda operating in iraq....i'm really hazy by what tenet means when he says...."..don't take the story farther. Don't make it more than it needs to be. And there's where the tension came in. But you can't ignore the front end. I think the chapter here says to you look, there were some areas of legitimate concern".....is tenet saying that he wasn't sure as to the extent of what alqaeda was doing in iraq ?...maybe somebody here can tell me their interpretation of this ?

tenet also said that he didn't think there were enough troops in iraq.....that's something that i have been saying all along....

so let me see if i understand this... he says there weren't enough troops in afghanistan to capture osama....then he says that we didn't have enough troops in iraq.......this reminds me of the gang that could shoot straight....unbelievable !!
 
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DOGS THAT BARK

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Jul 13, 1999
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Was checking this morning for response on interview and surprised there wasn't any.

Thought questions raised were good ones. Thought Tenet did do two step around several with vague answers AR mentioned.


Believe he has topic tonight about interrogation methods with Tenet--should be interesting also.
 
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