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To: Peach; All

well, I gotta tell ya, I don't envy anyone who takes that job. Being director of intelligence is like being an old testament prophet, you're hated for crying "wolf!" all the time, dismissed if the warned about disasters don't happen, and tarred'n'feathered when the bad guys get through the defenses.

That being said, I offer my thanks to Mr. Tenet for staying at the helm during what must have been one of the darkest periods in our intel agency's history. In a recent speech at Georgetown U., Tenet made clear and direct reference to the fact that rebuilding the Agency assets from the gutting they took ten years ago would last at least another five years. He was there when our Congress under Clinton started cutting back on intel, when the "gorelick wall of shame" was put up, and I believe he stood in the fire to continue guiding the resurgence of the agency despite the near-certainty that he would take the most heat. He didn't didibop like Woolsley did, and though Woolsley had some incisive remarks about the previous administration intel failures, those remarks were made from the outside where they made little effect. Tenet hung in there - perhaps like a sailor manning the flooding pumps on a ship listing seriously to port, but he didn't abandon ship, even if the then-captain (clinton) was mad as a cockeyed goose.

There's a saying that some are men of destiny, and some are defined by destiny. Though we may not ever know it, I think that a CIA afflicted with a string of short-term directors-leaving because of conflicts with the administration would ultimately have been destroyed - just what the left and the likes of Kerry (who has said as much with his voting record) would have wanted. Well, it's easy to do your duty when you are flushed with success, good fortune and a smiling star; but standing in the den of wolves that seek to dismantle the national intelligence apparatus for which you are responsible??? - that certainly is one definition of doing one's duty.

Tenet stands in the latter category, but Stand He Did.

CGVet58


480 posted on 06/03/2004 8:34:46 AM PDT by CGVet58 (God has granted us liberty, and we owe Him courage in return)
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To: CGVet58

Excellent post, I'll add that Tenet may yet be vindicated on the WMD Intel


495 posted on 06/03/2004 8:36:54 AM PDT by MJY1288 (Our Wounded Soldiers at Walter Reed Have Yet to be Visited by John Kerry. What's he Afraid of?)
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To: CGVet58
Tenet stands in the latter category, but Stand He Did.

BRAVO!

679 posted on 06/03/2004 9:23:03 AM PDT by McGavin999 (If Kerry can't deal with the "Republican Attack Machine" how is he going to deal with Al Qaeda)
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To: CGVet58
Your post deserves a repeat:

well, I gotta tell ya, I don't envy anyone who takes that job. Being director of intelligence is like being an old testament prophet, you're hated for crying "wolf!" all the time, dismissed if the warned about disasters don't happen, and tarred'n'feathered when the bad guys get through the defenses.

That being said, I offer my thanks to Mr. Tenet for staying at the helm during what must have been one of the darkest periods in our intel agency's history. In a recent speech at Georgetown U., Tenet made clear and direct reference to the fact that rebuilding the Agency assets from the gutting they took ten years ago would last at least another five years. He was there when our Congress under Clinton started cutting back on intel, when the "gorelick wall of shame" was put up, and I believe he stood in the fire to continue guiding the resurgence of the agency despite the near-certainty that he would take the most heat. He didn't didibop like Woolsley did, and though Woolsley had some incisive remarks about the previous administration intel failures, those remarks were made from the outside where they made little effect. Tenet hung in there - perhaps like a sailor manning the flooding pumps on a ship listing seriously to port, but he didn't abandon ship, even if the then-captain (clinton) was mad as a cockeyed goose.

There's a saying that some are men of destiny, and some are defined by destiny. Though we may not ever know it, I think that a CIA afflicted with a string of short-term directors-leaving because of conflicts with the administration would ultimately have been destroyed - just what the left and the likes of Kerry (who has said as much with his voting record) would have wanted. Well, it's easy to do your duty when you are flushed with success, good fortune and a smiling star; but standing in the den of wolves that seek to dismantle the national intelligence apparatus for which you are responsible??? - that certainly is one definition of doing one's duty.

Tenet stands in the latter category, but Stand He Did.

Thank you.

817 posted on 06/03/2004 10:26:03 AM PDT by AFPhys ((.Praying for President Bush, our troops, their families, and all my American neighbors..))
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