CIA Director Tenet Resigns

03/06/2004| IslamWeb

The most senior US intelligence official, George Tenet, has resigned after months of controversy about the work of the agency he has run since 1996. President George Bush announced on Thursday that his director of Central Intelligence (DCI) was resigning for personal reasons after doing "a superb job". "He has been a strong leader in the War on Terror," said Bush at the White House in Washington. "I will miss him." Tenet's position as DCI has been under increasingly critical scrutiny for months amid mounting controversy over the quality of US intelligence regarding Saddam Hussein's alleged weapons programmes. In the run-up to the US-led invasion of Iraq in March 2003, the Bush administration repeatedly claimed its intelligence showed Saddam had active nuclear, biological and chemical weapons programmes. Those allegations formed the basis of Washington's justification for attacking Iraq to topple Saddam. But subsequent searches for Iraqi weapons of mass destruction have yielded no evidence of any such weapons or active programmes - suggesting that US intelligence had either been wrong, misinterpreted or manipulated. **Tough questions*** Tenet faced tough questions over the quality of his agency's work with respect to Iraq when he was grilled by the Senate Armed Services Committee in March. The DCI has also been criticised for being insufficiently prepared before the 11 September 2001 air attacks on the US. Despite the failure to prevent those attacks and the subsequent death of around 3000 Americans, Tenet kept his job. In April, Tenet admitted to the bipartisan inquiry investigating the 9/11 attacks that his Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) suffered from systemic problems and had made mistakes prior to the attacks on Washington and New York. The 9/11 inquiry is due to report its findings in July. **'Poor record'*** In February, Democratic senator from Michigan Carl Levin accused Tenet of making false statements about Iraq's alleged WMD programme. Former CIA official Larry Johnson told Aljazeera.net in March that Tenet had a "poor record" as DCI, had grossly mishandled intelligence about Iraq's alleged weapons and should have resigned over the mishandling of Iraqi intelligence. Tenet became deputy director of Central Intelligence under President Bill Clinton in 1995 and was appointed DCI the following year. Tenet was initially seen as a stabilising figure in an agency hit by years of scandal and uncertainty. Prior to his appointment, the CIA had five directors in six years. The agency had also been recovering from various scandals such as the Ames case and other security leaks, as well as numerous allegations of complicity in drug trafficking in the 1980s. **PHOTO CAPTION*** CIA Director George Tenet. (Al-Jazeera)

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