Posted on 03/06/2006 6:21:10 AM PST by Frank T
Interviewing celebrities is cool. It's fun to sit next to George Clooney or Matt Damon as they discuss their new film, Syriana (and look for what they had to say later this week). But for me that's becoming old hat - I've interviewed plenty of actors and filmmakers. What the Syriana junket offered that was quite unique was the opportunity to interview a real live spy.
Robert Baer was in the CIA from 1976 to 1997. He served as a case officer in the Directorate of Operations, working in places like Iraq, Khartoum and Beirut. Seymour Hersh calls him "perhaps the best on-the-ground field officer in the Middle East." After leaving the CIA, Baer wrote a book called See No Evil that inspired part of the story of Syriana, specifically George Clooney's CIA agent. The book is a gripping eyewitness account of the situation in the Middle East in the 80s and 90s as it boiled up until September 11th, and you can buy it from CHUD by clicking here.
Warner Bros saved Baer for the end of the press day, and many of the journalists chose to leave rather than speak with him, but I couldn't imagine doing any such thing. This was a rare chance, and while everyone had been interesting all day, I felt that it was likely that Baer could be the most illuminating person to speak with.
Q: How real would you say the film is in how it portrays these situations?
Baer: I would say that the movie is absolutely authentic. I dont usually watch movies, and I would never, ever watch a spy movie. But this one its everybody I knew in this world. Oil traders I spent a lot of time with Islamic fundamentalists it was totally authentic. It was based in reality.
I traveled with [director Stephen] Gaghan and every voice he mixed up voices and faces to do this. He spent three or four months getting these people right. We were in Monte Carlo and spent the day with an Arab prince who is just the complete opposite of the Hollywood cliché of what an Arab prince is. He was classically educated at Oxford, a polo rider. Absolutely a beautiful house, not in the least bit garish. He knew history and American literature. He has just read The Corrections.
Q: How complicated was it for you to write your book, to sit down and cover all those years?
Baer: It was complicated to make it readable because bureaucrats, CIA, government officials dont write like normal people do. To even interest people in a very convoluted subject is hard. I think the middle of the book gets dense, with the Iranian stuff. The only people who really understand the middle part are the Israeli intelligence services.
Q: What was your most harrowing experience in the CIA?
Baer: I got shelled. I was being hunted by Iraqi helicopters. I was living in a cave with Talibani, getting shelled for a week straight. Theres nothing you can do when youre getting shelled by 155s.
Q: What a contrast that is to sitting in George Clooneys house in Italy. How long did you visit him?
Baer: A week or so. We flew in and he couldnt have been more gentlemanly. He ran out and grabbed my suitcase out of the car. Its hard for the CIA to meet Hollywood. He was writing Good Night, and Good Luck at the time. I didnt even know what he was talking about how do you take the Edward R Murrow story and put it on film. In black and white? He didnt get any suggestions from me on that.
We talked a lot. I asked him questions, Im a CIA officer. I asked him how do you ever get married? Youre rich, youre famous, youve got a nice house, youve got a nice personality. How would you ever meet a girl who you knew really loved you?
Q: What did he tell you?
Baer: He said he would never know.
Q: It must be hard being a CIA agent for similar reasons.
Baer: Its awful. Thats one of the reasons people get out of the CIA. If youre a woman and youre a case officer, youre going to work all day and all night whats your husband going to do, sit home and watch videos when youre assigned to Rwanda for three years? What do you do with your spouse? What do you do with your children and their education?
Q: How hard is it to get out of the CIA?
Baer: Me? I backed out firing two guns metaphorically.
Q: My impression and a lot of people share this is that the CIA is a dangerous and possibly evil organization. At least thats the emotional reaction.
Baer: Thats because you watch too many movies.
Q: Yeah, I was going to say, is there anything you can say to dissuade me from that?
Baer: Its a bureaucracy. But the movie is looking at the evil side, which is that theyve taken bad information to target someone overseas and kill him. The CIA does kill people, you have what is called lethal findings, in spite of 12333 Executive Order. You have the case of Khaddafi, you have the case in Yemen where they fired a missile into a car with 6 people and killed them all, theyre trying to kill bin Laden with Predators. It does happen.
My experience has been that the CIA gets into a bad position and does the wrong thing when its politicized. Look at the Bay of Pigs. If you look at the history of that, it wasnt the CIAs idea, it was Kennedys idea. It started with Eisenhower, he did it, he forced it through. It was done against the advice of the analysts on Cuba. Iraq I know the name of every source they had on Iraq, and I know what they said. I knew before going into this war that that information was crap. They were using the National Intelligence Estimate from October 2002 I knew it. I knew that Chalabi and his sources were lying and making this stuff up. I knew that the Germans didnt know, the French didnt know. It was a supposition that he had weapons of mass destruction. Thats what should have been in the National Intelligence Estimate. You should have had some psychiatrist saying, Well, knowing as much as we know about how Saddam thinks, Ill bet he kept some weapons. Thats all it should have said, because we had no evidence. But the fact is that Cheny went to the CIA until he got what he wanted. Its the politicization of the CIA.
Inside the CIA youve got basically liberal people Democrats or moderate Republicans that dont like torture, they dont putting lies on reports, and they dont like subverting governments. Its called action but neither is it covert nor is it action. Its just a way to fill up space in the newspaper because it always gets leaked.
Q: So what do you think of Porter Goss?
Baer: Total politicization. He was sent to the CIA to keep its estimations from getting out. The chief of station in Baghdad, who wrote in October 2003 that we cant win the war and never could, was fired basically. He was shunted off and he knew he had to leave. He is studying for a PhD now, and hes totally disgusted. I got calls from four or five CIA people today disgusted with the place. They dont like the torture, they dont like the politicization, all they care about is putting their kids through college.
Q: But how does this movie fit into the public perception of the CIA?
Baer: Its going to make it worse. This is a story based on a certain degree of truth that goes beyond my book. There was a prince in the Gulf who I was dealing with who was targeted through a couple of private entities because he was talking about unitizing fields in the Gulf, which would be to the detriment of the oil companies. He was eventually kidnapped.
Its based on bad intelligence and a CIA thats been politicized, and its true. But I blame official Washington, I dont blame the CIA. I have no problem with the CIAs counter-intelligence program, which looks for spies and works great. We do great on countries where theres no political interest.
Q: So this starts in the White House.
Baer: White House and Congress.
Q: Speaking of politicization, can you talk about the Valerie Plame leak? Does that, to you, rise to treason?
Baer: Yeah. They didnt know what kind of cover she was under. And the fact that they bandied her name my name was leaked in the campaign finance hearings of 97. They didnt care. Democrats leaked it. There wasnt a Justice referral. But its that kind of politicization that goes all through the White House.
This nonsense that Iran is going to become democratic and Westernized is total fantasy. These people are operating in a bubble. We can see with the current president that totally the opposite has happened. All you have to do is go to Iran this year and ask people what they think in southern Tehran, ask the people who vote. You have the American Enterprise Institute saying, Dont worry, Irans coming around, this is the end of the Babylonian captivity its just drivel.
Q: How do you get someone like the head of Hezzbollah to be a friend?
Baer: Hezzbollah is the most sophisticated political party in the Middle East. Why they would sit down - they sat down with Gaghan. I interviewed, for ABC, Fadlallah. Theyre sophisticated. They know Im out of the CIA. They Google my name and see Im independent, I say anything I want for them or against them.
Q: How about the Israelis?
Baer: Theyre great. You spend a week with Shin Bet, who know the Palestinians, or you spend a week with the army I spent a week in Hebron and they say, Lets get out of the West Bank. Its a waste of military, its dividing Israeli society, its not what the army is for. The only answer is [UN resolution] 242. The crazy settlers I just avoided talking to them. They denied that the Hebron Massacre even occurred. Of course thats the beginning of suicide bombings, 40 days after the Hebron Massacre. Those people deny it but theyre religious fanatics who the Israelis are more distrustful than anybody.
Q: I dont want to give anything away, but in the film theres an assassination. Could that kind of operation, as shown, be carried out today?
Baer: Why not? Theyre assassinating people all the time in Iraq today. The tribal chief that helped Gaghan understand the politics of Iraq, I was supposed to go stay with him in the war. His house was hit by 6 missiles, JDAMs theyre called. Missiles as long as this room. Killed him and everybody in his family.
Theres fabulous technology. These satellites and Predators are great. You just sit there with a camera and its all remote. You could be watching everybody in this room you just need the right angle.
But what good does technology do to fight the resistance in Iraq? Yeah, you can kill people, but their relatives come after you like in Jordan. Youre just causing more problems. [Jordan happened] because we went into Fallujah. You cant go into Fallujah and kill Bedouins, who do have blood feuds, and not get payback.
Q: Do you think there will be payback against the Shia who did it?
Baer: Were going to. Were going to arrest family members, but that just makes it worse. Its a cycle of violence you cant win. The only time I have seen anyone win the cycle of violence was the Syrians, in Hama, in 1982. I was in Hama right afterwards, and they flattened the town. I dont think thats a good idea for the West to do, but thats your choice.
Q: Gaghan was saying that when you were showing him around the Middle East, you werent just showing him around, you were looking for the people responsible for the murder of Daniel Pearl. Can you talk about that?
Baer: Im a trained intelligence officer and ask questions. I go to Hollywood and ask questions. I was just at FX, which is over the Warner Bros lot, and I said, Hey you guys have great line of sight. They asked what that means, and I said, For audio. You can find out what Warner Bros is doing. It was a joke of course.
But I keep on asking questions about the Middle East. Its a fascinating place and I want to know what makes it tick. Everybody has something new to say. So while Gaghan was doing whatever he was doing, taking notes, I was asking questions.
Q: He feels that you may feel some personal responsibility in the Pearl case.
Baer: I saw Danny Pearl a lot before 9/11. After 9/11 he emailed me from India, he was in Bombay at the time. I still have the emails. He said, Who did it? I said that the last guy I knew who was planning to run planes into American buildings was Khalid Shaikh Mohammed. I had tapes from Khalid Shaikh Mohammed talking about this. Clandestine tapes I tried to send to the CIA, but they didnt want to hear about it.
Q: Why didnt they want to hear?
Baer: Because once youre out of the CIA, youre out for good. They dont like people, especially like me, because I yap my mouth.
Q: Again, Gaghan felt that you feel guilt about it all.
Baer: I do feel guilt because he was in Karachi asking about Khalid Shaikh Mohammed. It was probably Khalid Shaikh Mohammed who killed Pearl.
Q: What are you doing next?
Baer: I wrote a novel called Blow the House Down. I was so tired of people asking me if 9/11 was a conspiracy so I drew up the perfect conspiracy, which you cant disprove. It was done from the inside.
Q: When is that coming out?
Baer: May.
Q: Can you explain more about the conspiracy?
Baer: People say, How did they know the World Trade Center would collapse? I know theres a formula that you can put into jet fuel that makes it burn at a much higher rate once it implodes into a building. I took elements and real people the last American who was with bin Laden was a friend of mine, he was Porter Goss staff director, and he was found with his head blown off in a motel room in Virginia.
Q: Did you meet Osama?
Baer: No.
Q: Clooneys not playing you, but hes playing a character sort of based on you.
Baer: Clooneys perfect. Hes a burnt out guy at the end of his career and hes got nowhere to go. Hes offered the chance to get ahead finally. Hes been out in the field, out in the trenches, for years, and he doesnt really know how Washington works. He grabs at the chance. Everybody in the film makes compromises. Ive certainly been offered compromises, as everybody in the CIA has at one point, to betray a principal.
Q: What do think the CIA is going to think of the movie?
Baer: What do you think Tenets going to think about it? Theyre going to hate it. They have a whole office in the CIA that works with Hollywood that tries to make favorable movies. They were clichés, they were crap, these movies.
Alot of Baer's points come from the point of view that the war would not work, and that there's too much "politicisation." But he does make a good point about ending arab blood fueds and ending the "cycle of violence": level the place. Once the Iranians get their hands on the Holy Bomb, I think that will become a reality.
I wonder how he feels the UN Sanctions on Iraqi WMD starved 500,000 Iraqis to death during his tenure?
BTTT.. and a ping to read later when I have more time available.
I'm glad Clooney won! The Oscar is usually the kiss of death for ones career!
This guy thinks the Bay of Pigs invasion was Kennedy's idea? Guess that tells you how much one can rely upon his opinions.
At first I thought this was a reference to Clooney himself. But Baer was talking about his character.
Oh, if it were only true....
Self-serving crap. I don't trust a word this guy says, even though I never heard of him before. The interview has nothing to do with seriousness or objectivity, but merely makes Baer the star of his own show. Hogwash from beginning to end.
Well, he said it started with Eisenhower, during his administration.
I don't think this part is hogwash:
"Inside the CIA youve got basically liberal people Democrats or moderate Republicans "
I liked his book "See No Evil". Like him or not, he had front row seats in Iraq during the 80's and 90's...
Interesting...
I haven't seen this movie, but Mort Kondrake trashed it, saying it was an example of a liberal Hollywood movie.
Kennedy had nothing to do with the planning for the action. It was all in motion before he took office though he knew about it. And used it to make it appear as if the Eisenhauer administration was doing nothing and being "soft on Cuber". That was one of the reasons Nixon looked so uncomfortable in the debates because he could not tell anyone that plans were in motion to do something.
Kennedy did allow the action to be screwed up but he did not plan it.
That simply is not correct. The BoP was NEVER Kennedy's idea and was a CIA plan all the way.
Another idiot hawking a book.
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