Day By Day

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

The Intelligence Insurgency

The WSJ opines:
We're as curious as anyone to see how Ms. McCarthy's case unfolds. But this would appear to be only the latest example of the unseemly symbiosis between elements of the press corps and a cabal of partisan bureaucrats at the CIA and elsewhere in the "intelligence community" who have been trying to undermine the Bush Presidency.

....

Leaving partisanship aside, this ought to be deeply troubling to anyone who cares about democratic government. The CIA leakers are arrogating to themselves the right to subvert the policy of a twice-elected Administration. Paul Pillar, another former CIA analyst well known for opposing Mr. Bush while he was at Langley, appears to think this is as it should be. He recently wrote in Foreign Affairs that the intelligence community should be treated like the Federal Reserve and have independent political status. In other words, the intelligence community should be a sort of clerisy accountable to no one.

Read it here.

In a democratic system this kind of irresponsibility is intolerable. Professionals within the permanent government must always be subordinate to and accountable to the elected politicians. It doesn't matter whether we are talking about the military, the CIA, State, or whatever. Government is far too important to be trusted to the professionals.

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