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Tenet: "Slam Dunk" Comment Misused
CBS News / 60 Minutes ^ | April 26, 2007 | Scott Pelley.

Posted on 04/26/2007 6:24:24 PM PDT by FreedomPoster

(CBS) Ex-CIA Director George Tenet says the way the Bush administration has used his now famous "slam dunk" comment — which he admits saying in reference to making the public case for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq — is both disingenuous and dishonorable.

It also ruined his reputation and his career, he tells 60 Minutes Scott Pelley in his first network television interview. Pelley's report will be broadcast Sunday, April 29, at 7 p.m. ET/PT.

The phrase "slam dunk" didn't refer to whether Saddam Hussein actually had WMDs, says Tenet; the CIA thought he did. He says he was talking about what information could be used to make that case when he uttered those words. "We can put a better case together for a public case. That's what I meant," explains Tenet.

Months later, when no WMDs were found in Iraq, someone leaked the story to Washington Post editor Bob Woodward, who then wrote about a Dec. 21, 2002, White House meeting in which the CIA director reportedly "rose up, threw his arms in the air [and said,] 'It's a slam dunk case.' " Tenet says it was a passing comment, made well after major decisions had already been made to mobilize the nation for war.

The leak effectively made him a scapegoat for the invasion and ended his career.

"At the end of the day, the only thing you have … is your reputation built on trust and your personal honor and when you don't have that anymore, well, there you go," Tenet tells Pelley.

He says he doesn't know who leaked it but says there were only a handful of people in the room.

"It's the most despicable thing that ever happened to me," Tenet says. "You don't do this. You don't throw somebody overboard just because it's a deflection. Is that honorable? It's not honorable to me."

Tenet says to have the president base his entire decision to go to war on such a remark is unbelievable.

"So a whole decision to go to war, when all of these other things have happened in the run-up to war? You make mobilization decisions, you've looked at war plans," says Tenet. "I'll never believe that what happened that day informed the president's view or belief of the legitimacy or the timing of this war. Never!"

Tenet says what bothers him most is that senior administration officials like Vice President Dick Cheney and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice continue using "slam dunk" as a talking point.

"And the hardest part of all this has been just listening to this for almost three years, listening to the vice president go on 'Meet the Press' on the fifth year [anniversary] of 9/11 and say, 'Well, George Tenet said slam dunk' as if he needed me to say 'slam dunk' to go to war with Iraq," he tells Pelley. "And you listen to that and they never let it go. I mean, I became campaign talk. I was a talking point. 'Look at the idiot [who] told us and we decided to go to war.' Well, let's not be so disingenuous … Let's everybody just get up and tell the truth. Tell the American people what really happened."

In the broadcast, Tenet says the intelligence extracted from terror suspects in the agency's "High Value Detainee" program, which includes so-called "enhanced interrogation techniques," was more valuable than all the other terror intelligence gathered by the FBI, the National Security Agency and the CIA.

The nation's former top spy denies that any torture took place, but tells Pelley that the program saved lives and allowed the government to foil terror plots.

The High Value Detainee program uses "enhanced" techniques said to include sleep deprivation, exposure to extreme temperatures, and water boarding, in which suspects reportedly are restrained as a steady stream of water is poured over their faces, causing a severe gag reflex and a terrifying fear of drowning.

In Sunday's interview, Pelley challenges Tenet on the "enhanced interrogations," a topic that gets little play in his much-anticipated book, "At the Center of the Storm."

"Here's what I would say to you, to the Congress, to the American people, to the president of the United States: I know that this program has saved lives. I know we've disrupted plots," he tells Pelley. "I know this program alone is worth more than the FBI, the Central Intelligence Agency and the National Security Agency put together, have been able to tell us."

The new program for interrogation came after the 9/11 attacks. When pressed by Pelley about whether interrogations included water boarding, Tenet insists he does not talk about techniques, and that what he means by "enhanced interrogation" is not torture. Whatever it is, it's justified in his mind.

"We don't torture people," he says. "I want you to listen to me. The context is it's post-9/11. I've got reports of nuclear weapons in New York City, apartment buildings that are gonna be blown up, planes that are gonna fly into airports all over again, plot lines that I don't know. I don't know what's going on inside the United States, and I'm struggling to find out where the next disaster is going to occur. Everybody forgets one central context of what we lived through: the palpable fear that we felt on the basis of the fact that there was so much we did not know."

When 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was captured in a raid in Pakistan, the "enhanced interrogations" apparently were a surprise to him. According to Tenet, the captured terrorist told CIA interrogators, "I'll talk to you guys when you take me to New York and I can see my lawyer." Instead, he reportedly was flown around the world, kept in secret prisons and water-boarded. Tenet repeated his denial again and again: "Let me say that again to you. We don't torture people. OK?"

But when asked by Pelley why the "enhanced interrogation" techniques were necessary, Tenet says, "Because these are people who will never, ever, ever tell you a thing. These are people who know who's responsible for the next terrorist attack … [who] wouldn't blink an eyelash about killing you, your family, me and my family and everybody in this town."

When Pelley presses, asking whether he lost sleep over the interrogations, Tenet says, "Of course you lose sleep over it. You're on new territory."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: clintonista
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To: Shermy
What can I tell you Kabar? Libby, Rove, etc. drafted and edited the announcement. Tenet did get in some jabs on Wilson, though.

Do you have a source for that assertion? I have a hard time believing that Libby and Rove drafted it. Edited it, perhaps. I am sure it was cleared by the WH before he published it.

Take a gander at this

"Mr. Tenet hints at some score-settling in the book. He describes in particular the extraordinary tension between him and Condoleezza Rice, then national security adviser, and her deputy, Stephen J. Hadley, in internal debate over how the president came to say erroneously in his 2003 State of the Union address that Iraq was seeking uranium in Africa."

He describes an episode in 2003, shortly after he issued a statement taking partial responsibility for that error. He said he was invited over for a Sunday afternoon, back-patio lemonade by Colin L. Powell, then secretary of state. Mr. Powell described what Mr. Tenet called “a lively debate” on Air Force One a few days before about whether the White House should continue to support Mr. Tenet as C.I.A. director.

“In the end, the president said yes, and said so publicly,” Mr. Tenet wrote. “But Colin let me know that other officials, particularly the vice president, had quite another view.”

He writes that the controversy over who was to blame for the State of the Union error was the beginning of the end of his tenure. After the finger-pointing between the White House and the C.I.A., he wrote, “My relationship with the administration was forever changed.”

41 posted on 04/26/2007 8:06:22 PM PDT by kabar
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To: Buckhead

Yep. What you said.


42 posted on 04/26/2007 8:07:02 PM PDT by Eagles6 (Dig deeper, more ammo.)
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To: exit82
Tenet is the poster boy for why you should never accept the previous administration’s key players...”

The question is begged: Why did Bush and his cohorts in the administration —especially such sophisticated gents and Chaney and Rumsfeld —allow this grossly incompetent holdover from the Clinton administration to stay on ?

I submit, “W” is an inordinately lousy judge of character — and grossly naive in many aspects of real-politik. (And, I am a strong supporter of the current administration). But, Putin, Merkel, Gonzales, Powell...and a few others come to mind.

Pretty bad judgment calls, ladies and gentlemen.

43 posted on 04/26/2007 8:10:14 PM PDT by dk/coro
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To: Williams

He meant a “slam dunk” case could be made to the public that Sadaam had WMD.

Can anyone tell me the significant difference?

Five Years


44 posted on 04/26/2007 8:21:27 PM PDT by sgtyork (Liberalism worthy of the name emphasizes freedom of the individual, democracy and the rule of law.)
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To: FreedomPoster

If Bush had asked for Tenet’s resignation, along with the top 50 bureaucrats at the CIA at noon on September 12, 2001, his administration would be in a significantly better position now and it would have rewarded FAILURE appropriately.


45 posted on 04/26/2007 8:27:29 PM PDT by sgtyork (Liberalism worthy of the name emphasizes freedom of the individual, democracy and the rule of law.)
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To: FreedomPoster
So fifty years from now, when secret internal documents are released to the National Archive that show that the US failed to expose a Saddam/Russia/French/Syria/UN agreement to cover-up Iraq’s WMD capability for reasons not to embarrass and/or delegitimize the “World Community” in attempt to prevent a wider regional war, will the MSM clamor Bush deceived us?
46 posted on 04/26/2007 8:35:46 PM PDT by endthematrix (a globalized and integrated world - which is coming, one way or the other. - Hillary)
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To: Buckhead

A weasel, who should NEVER have been given a job by Dubya. Give Klintoon credit, he only employed tried and true democRATS in positions of trust and fired every Republican in sight ASAP. A lesson in realpolitik that our little frat boy has never learned.


47 posted on 04/26/2007 8:37:48 PM PDT by Agent Smith (Fallujah delenda est. (I wish))
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To: FreedomPoster

So many of these folks can’t accept the reality of 9/11. They all want to hang on to the last century like we are still living in it. Very sad, not the State of the Union, but the State of Delusion, that is like a gas rising from the Washington swamp. I think many of them got into government, not for what they could do for the country, but what they could get out of the country. When real work needed to be done after 9/11, its like their fantasy life was shattered back into reality, and they don’t like having to do real work.


48 posted on 04/26/2007 8:49:37 PM PDT by HisKingdomWillAbolishSinDeath (Christ's Kingdom on Earth is the answer. What is your question?)
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To: FreedomPoster

Nice repayment for the Medal of Freedom. Loser.


49 posted on 04/27/2007 8:27:15 AM PDT by DemEater
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To: KingSnorky

“I expect nothing less from a Clinton appointee.”

Exactly, I bet him speaking out can all be traced back to the Hillary08Machine, I wouldn’t doubt it if Tenet gets hired again by Clinton’s.


50 posted on 04/27/2007 2:05:00 PM PDT by RatsDawg
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To: silverleaf

‘George Tenet, ex-CIA Director - can’t believe the President took HIS opinion on Iraqi intention and led our nation to war...”

George Tenet suppose to give opinions to the President. He’s the head of his department. He should know what is going on but he didn’t.

It was the Clinton Administration who decided to launch Desert Fox in 1998. We had no human intelligence on the ground after that fiasco because Saddam thought all UN inspectors to be CIA agents spying on his Regime.....for nearly five years we had no clue what was going on with Saddam’s WMD program.

What do you want the President to do? Be a mind reader?


51 posted on 04/27/2007 8:03:12 PM PDT by Milligan
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