Bush Finally Nominates New C.I.A. Director

Ex-CIA director Tennet did a “marvelous” job of collecting “evidences” against Iraq to make president bush’s job easier…lets see what kind of evidences this new director would produce against Iran to make president bush’s job easier once again….

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/08/10/politics/10CND-INTEL.html?hp

Re: Bush Finally Nominates New C.I.A. Director

sorry guys, the last link requires a password i guess. here is another link.

http://www.cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS/08/10/cia.goss/index.html

Bush announces Goss to head CIA
Senate must approve nomination
Tuesday, August 10, 2004 Posted: 10:53 AM EDT (1453 GMT)

WASHINGTON (CNN) – President Bush on Tuesday announced his choice to lead the CIA as U.S. Rep. Porter Goss, an eight-term Republican congressman who butted heads with former CIA Director George Tenet over the agency’s intelligence gathering.

“He knows the CIA inside and out,” Bush said at the start of his Rose Garden announcement. "He is the right man to lead this important agency at this critical moment in our nation’s history.

“He understands the importance of human intelligence,” Bush said. “He was a CIA field officer on two continents.”

Goss, 65, has been chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence since 1997. He had been described as a leading contender for the top job at the CIA.

Tenet announced his resignation in June. His top deputy, John McLaughlin, is the acting director until a replacement is installed.

Bush highlighted the importance spies would play in his revamped intelligence gathering plan when he announced last week that he would ask Congress to create the position of a national intelligence director as his principal adviser on countering terrorism.

“America faces determined enemies who train in many nations,” Bush said Tuesday. “This threat is unprecedented, and to stop them from killing our citizens, we must have the best intelligence possible.”

Bush’s nomination must have Senate approval before Goss could become the new CIA director, and there are early indications that his confirmation may encounter difficulties.

Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-West Virginia, vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, said he was disappointed in Goss’ nomination, his staff said Tuesday.

Last month, when the congressman’s name was first mentioned in connection with the top CIA job, Rockefeller and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said Goss was too close to the intelligence community and was too partisan to be effective in the post.

The House Democratic leadership will hold a news conference later Tuesday morning on the president’s choice.

Goss said Tuesday that he looked forward to the confirmation process.

He said he was “deeply honored” and “extremely grateful for the opportunity” the president had offered him.

“The essence of our intelligence capability is people, and we have some wonderful Americans doing a great job,” Goss said. “I used to be part of them when I worked for the CIA. I’m very proud to be associated with them again, and I look forward to the challenges of the future.”

Administration sources had earlier indicated it was unlikely that the president would move to find a replacement for Tenet during the election season to avoid a potentially contentious confirmation process.

Goss was an agent in the CIA’s clandestine service from 1960 to 1971. He is completing his eighth term in Congress, representing a district in southwest Florida, and is not running for re-election in the fall.

In June, Goss’ committee attached a scathing report to an intelligence appropriations bill passed by the House. The report called the CIA’s human intelligence gathering apparatus “dysfunctional” and adverse to change, and charged that its intelligence analysts were timid and lacked proper focus.

In response, Tenet fired off a letter to Goss, characterizing the committee’s criticisms as “ill-informed” and “absurd.”

Goss had planned to retire from Congress at the end of his last term, but Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney asked him to remain. House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R- Illinois, arranged for a change in House rules that limit committee service to allow Goss to stay on the committee and to chair it.