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TEL
AVIV – A damning investigation by House Republicans released on
Wednesday has found that the intelligence arm of the U.S. Military’s
Central Command (CENTCOM) routinely produced intelligence that
“distorted, suppressed, or substantially altered” the results of the
campaign against the Islamic State.
Breitbart Jerusalem reviewed the
House report and herein presents the ten most troubling finds, in no particular order.
1 – Top CENTCOM leaders modified intelligence
assessments to present an “unduly positive” assessment of combating the
Islamic State and training the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF).
The complaint alleges that senior leaders
within the CENTCOM Intelligence Directorate and JIC, including the
Director of Intelligence and other senior intelligence staff, violated
regulations, tradecraft standards, and professional ethics by modifying
intelligence assessments to present an unduly positive outlook on
CENTCOM efforts to train the ISF and combat ISIL.
Media outlets have also raised
allegations of possible reprisals against individuals within the CENTCOM
Intelligence Directorate. …
According to multiple interviewees,
operational reporting was used as a justification to alter or “soften”
an analytic product so it would cast U.S. efforts in a more positive
light. No interview provided any instances where operational reporting
was used as a justification to come to a more pessimistic conclusion.
Additionally, numerous interviewees indicated that analytical products
which conflicted with operational reporting were routinely subject to
more stringent scrutiny than those that did not.
2 – Intelligence analysts declined to be
interviewed, possibly out of fear of reprisals from CENTCOM leadership,
while the interviews that did take place were under the watchful eyes of
DOD officials.
Additionally, the Joint Task Force
requested interviews with four more analysts whose positions provided
them with visibility into the allegations. These analysts declined to be
interviewed. Although they did not express their reasons for declining,
the Joint Task Force is concerned that some of the analysts may have
done so out of fear of potential reprisals for their testimony.
For example, as the Joint Task Force’s
interviews were commencing, the Director of the DIA publicly
characterized reports of the whistleblower’s allegations as
exaggerations.
It must also be noted that, pursuant to
longstanding arrangements between DOD and the Armed Services Committee,
DOD insisted on having department officials present during Joint Task
Force interviews.
3 – CENTCOM intel agents operated within a ‘toxic’ leadership environment.
The Republican lawmakers fingered CENTCOM leaders, and noted the
intelligence process was cleaner under previous officials and Lloyd
Austin III, who served as commander from 2013 to 2016. Dozens of
analysts viewed the “subsequent leadership environment as toxic”:
Survey results provided to the Joint Task
Force demonstrated that dozens of analysts viewed the subsequent
leadership environment as toxic, with 40% of analysts responding that
they had experienced an attempt to distort or suppress intelligence in
the past year.
4 – General Austin’s claim to Congress that IS was
in a “defensive crouch” did not reflect the data possessed at the time
by CENTCOM senior leaders.
Although no interviewee remembered the
process of preparing the specific press releases and congressional
testimony highlighted here, interviewees described a process in which
congressional testimony and public affairs statements did not
necessarily reflect contemporaneous intelligence assessments. In
particular, the Joint Task Force was dismayed to learn that Intelligence
Directorate senior leaders seemed unfamiliar with General Austin’s
statements to Congress that ISIL was in a “defensive crouch” and
indicated this characterization did not reflect their best assessments
at the time.
5 – CENTCOM established an intelligence “fusion
center” for IS-related intel, but kept out analysts whose views
conflicted with senior intelligence leaders.
In June 2014, with the ISIL threat
apparent, CENTCOM established an intelligence “fusion center,” a
specially equipped JIC facility staffed around-the-clock, to serve as a
“focal point” for ISIL-related intelligence. Interviewees recalled only
informal communications noting the center’s establishment, and some were
also uncertain about the center’s organizational structure,
responsibilities, and how it was determined which JIC analysts would
participate. The establishment of the Intelligence Fusion Center also
removed some analysts who had the most experience with respect to ISIL
and Iraq, including those whose analytic views often conflicted with
those of CENTCOM’s senior intelligence leaders, from the production of
daily intelligence products. This impact was especially significant
given the critical analytic tasks of the Intelligence Fusion Center at
this time of paramount importance in the theater.
6 – Restrictions were implemented for analysts whose views dissented from the mainstream inside CENTCOM.
Public statements by CENTCOM
representatives emphasized close collaboration with other elements of
the IC, but many interviewees indicated that in late 2014, senior
CENTCOM Intelligence Directorate leaders instructed analysts to cease
all external coordination with other IC analysts. The authority to
coordinate was restricted to senior officials only, including to leaders
of the Fusion Center. Other special arrangements were also put into
place to notify the Director of Intelligence in the event that analysts
sought to formally “dissent” from analysis produced elsewhere. The
restrictions on collaboration have since been partially rescinded.
7 – Analysis was minimized in favor of details from coalition forces while intelligence was skewed to be ‘optimistic.’
Furthermore, senior leaders also relied
on details reported from coalition forces rather than more objective and
better documented intelligence reporting. The Joint Task Force can find
no justifiable reason why operational reporting was repeatedly used as a
rationale to change the analytic product, particularly when the changes
only appeared to be made in a more optimistic direction. By supplanting
analytic tradecraft with unpublished and ad hoc operational reporting,
Joint Intelligence Center (JIC) leadership circumvented important
processes that are intended to protect the integrity of intelligence
analysis.
8 – Shocking survey results showed analysts believed
data was “distorted, suppressed, or substantially altered” by their
supervisors.
The annual Analytic Objectivity and
Process Survey, directed by the ODNI, was conducted from August through
October 2015, and included responses from 125 analysts and managers
within CENTCOM. The survey results were significantly worse than those
of other IC agencies or COCOMs, and showed that a substantial number of
CENTCOM respondents felt their supervisors distorted, suppressed, or
substantially altered analytic products.
Over 50% of analysts responded that
CENTCOM procedures, practices, processes, and organizational structures
hampered objective analysis, and 40% responded that they had experienced
an attempt to distort or suppress intelligence in the past year. Yet
despite receiving these results in December 2015, CENTCOM and IC leaders
did not take corrective actions to address many of the issues
identified in the survey results.
9 – Even after whistleblower complaints and the
“alarming” internal survey last year, the Pentagon took no steps to
correct its allegedly distorted intelligence process.
The Joint Task Force is troubled that
despite receiving the whistleblower complaint in May 2015 and receiving
alarming survey results in December 2015, neither CENTCOM, the Defense
Intelligence Agency (DIA), the Under Secretary of Defense for
Intelligence, nor the Office of the Director of National Intelligence
(ODNI) took any demonstrable steps to improve the analytic climate
within CENTCOM. The survey results alone should have prompted CENTCOM
and IC leaders to take corrective action without other inducements.
10 – Mirroring the Benghazi House Committee’s
complaints against the State Department, the Joint Task Force here
writes it “did not receive access to all the materials it requested” and
details a process of denying information and records.
Aaron
Klein is Breitbart’s Jerusalem bureau chief and senior investigative
reporter. He is a New York Times bestselling author and hosts the
popular weekend talk radio program, “Aaron Klein Investigative Radio.” Follow him on Twitter @AaronKleinShow. Follow him on Facebook.
With research by Joshua Klein.
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