Read Playing to the Edge: American Intelligence in the Age of Terror Online
Authors: Michael V. Hayden
As I was walking offstage I didn’t turn as I heard a female voice shout, “You’re a liar, Hayden. You have blood on your hands.” I didn’t turn because I judged her to be unpersuadable. No sense trying. She had her world. The rest of us had ours.
Or I, at least, had mine.
• • •
I
HAVE SPENT
my adult life working in American intelligence. It has been quite an honor. Generally well resourced. A global mission. No want of issues.
And it was a hell of a ride: from the DMZ in Korea to Masada in Israel; from war-ravaged Sarajevo to hyperelegant Geneva; from Baghdad under siege to Sofia under communism; from ancient Addis Ababa to modern London; from isolated Guantánamo to teeming Bamako.
I got to meet the likes of a criminal Ratko Mladić (Bosnian Serb commander), an imperturbable Li Chan Bok (North Korean negotiator), a tough Alvaro Uribe (president of Colombia), a heroic Abdullah II (king of Jordan), a subtly urbane Mohammed bin Zayed (crown prince of Abu Dhabi), a frenetic Nicolas Sarkozy (president of France), a distasteful Saif al-Islam (son of Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi), and a whole lot more.
Mostly, though, what stands out is the mission—defending a republic as worthy as ours is—and the people, those noble individuals who mentored me as a junior officer, those I befriended, those I may have helped along the way, and all those who still toil in the shadows and keep the secrets.
Washington’s spy ring on Long Island was called the Culper Ring after the alias of its chief agent. It was formed after a previous attempt at espionage on Long Island and in New York City had tragically failed with the execution of twenty-one-year-old Nathan Hale. There is a statue of Hale in a quiet, shaded spot on the CIA campus between the Original Headquarters Building and the Bubble, the agency’s auditorium.
Every CIA director gets to design a personal coin that he can give to top performers. The front side is standard, the agency shield, but the back side is up to each director. As a history major, I toyed with the idea of putting an imprint of Hale’s statue there. My deputy, Steve Kappes, immediately objected. “You realize he was killed on his first mission, right? And never got any useful information for Washington?”
As usual, Steve was right. I dropped the idea, but held close the thought that success in this business was not guaranteed and failure brought with it a great price. Hale was executed, after all, and the British held New York for the rest of the war.
My daily routine as CIA director began at 5:30 a.m. with a three-mile run along the Potomac, a quick shower, and a thirty-minute drive to Langley in the back of an armored SUV with my PDB briefer. We went over what would be shown to the president at eight o’clock, and then a whole lot of reporting not yet ready for prime time, plus a stack of operational cables from CIA stations and bases. The whole drill took a little more than an hour on average, half in the car, half after we got to the office. Reading that book every day made it hard to maintain a positive view of human nature. It was clear that there was evil afoot in the world.
Facing that evil, sharing a responsibility to prevent or at least deflect it, I sometimes contemplated what the twenty-first-century equivalent of Hale’s failure might be.
That conjured up some very dark thoughts, some very dark thoughts indeed.
One of the joys of this project was reestablishing contact with dozens of old friends who freely gave of their time to chat, to reminisce, and to correct both my memory and my prose.
My methodology was pretty straightforward: take advantage of a long domestic or international flight to hammer out (from memory) the summary of a chapter and then identify the people and documents I would need to make sure I got it right, got it complete, and (I would hope) got it interesting.
Over the course of eighteen months I conducted over seventy interviews. I am deeply grateful for all the cooperation, but for fear of leaving someone out and, frankly, to spare my former colleagues the danger of unwarranted editorial abuse or legal harassment by a small fraction of the people they have worked so hard to protect, I have chosen not to mention specific names.
Special thanks, though, to groups like the NSA professionals who set up the Stellarwind program and operated it so professionally and came to my interview with stacks of documents detailing the program’s effectiveness. The same for those involved in the CIA detention program, equally anxious for the chance to tell their side of the story. Not surprisingly, the legal staffs at both agencies were also enthused by the opportunity to set the legal record straight. Everyone I spoke to was willing to be judged on what he or she had
actually
done and wanted
that
record out there.
I had wonderful staff support while at CIA, NSA, and ODNI, and I relied heavily on the extensive contemporaneous notes of my executive assistants, chiefs of staff, and others. Kudos to all of them, too, for helping me decipher their handwriting and for the rich verbal detail they willingly provided on nearly forgotten episodes.
Real practitioners of the craft of intelligence rarely get a chance to step outside of themselves and talk about and grade their own work. CIA station chiefs and NSA SIGINT collectors and analysts from both agencies did exactly that during my discussions with them. They were candid about what worked and what didn’t, where they were right and where they were wrong. I have tried to reflect their honesty in the narrative.
Of course, not every officer was willing to talk to me. Two folks, both
very
prominent in the counterterrorism effort, politely declined. I consider them both good friends, but true to their own code, they just don’t talk to
anyone
, not even a friendly former director writing a book. Ya gotta respect that.
Requests to interview serving intelligence officials were handled by NSA and CIA headquarters, as were my many requests for documents. Special thanks to all for the responsiveness. Frankly, I was surprised how much of a director’s daily routine is chronicled and archived and retrievable. These were largely the same folks who had to judge what I could and couldn’t say when it came to classification. They were firm when they had to be, but understanding and helpful where they could.
To make sure that I reflected policy debates accurately I also checked in with my executive branch colleagues, cabinet officers, and White House officials. All were generous and candid. My thanks.
I have also drawn on other writing I have done since leaving government, especially my more or less regular columns for CNN, the
Washington Times
, and
World Affairs Journal.
Being able to further develop thoughts first mentioned there added much to the current narrative.
That narrative ended up being a solo work, but I need to mention Vernon Loeb, former
Washington Post
reporter and metro desk editor, who first proposed we collaborate on this project. Before we were barely under way, Vernon opted out in favor of an editor’s desk in Houston, but it was his initiative that got me moving.
Finally, I really wanted all of this to be readable, so I tried out chapter drafts on my wife and our adult children. They were generous in sharing their thoughts on my prose, grammar, organization, and logic. They also were very encouraging, sometimes explicitly pointing out the responsibility to leave
my
story for the grandchildren.
The family’s inputs really helped the storytelling. If anything remains that is wrong, inelegant, redundant, or superfluous, the fault is fully
mine.
The page numbers in this index refer to the printed version of this book. The link provided will take you to the beginning of that print page. You may need to scroll forward from that location to find the corresponding reference on your e-reader.
Abbottabad,
204
–5,
329
n
,
338
,
340
,
341
,
373
Abdul Aziz bin Saud, King,
321
Abdullah I of Jordan,
322
Abdullah II of Jordan,
322
–24,
431
Abdullah of Saudi Arabia,
320
–21,
322
Abramson, Jill,
118
Addington, David,
70
,
71
,
72
–73,
81
,
85
,
87
,
366
Afghanistan,
30
,
31
,
39
,
45
,
53
,
65
,
66
,
104
,
136
,
148
,
195
,
206
–10,
223
,
242
,
292
,
293
,
295
,
305
,
329
,
334
–36,
347
–49,
357
Biden in,
208
Kabul,
30
,
31
,
204
,
206
,
207
–8,
316
,
349
Korean missionaries in,
324
National Directorate of Security (NDS),
208
–9,
316
Taliban in,
31
,
53
,
115
,
204
,
208
–10,
345
Ahmadinejad, Mahmoud,
306
Air America,
6
Air Bridge Denial Program,
281
Air Intelligence Agency (AIA),
9
,
127
,
128
–29
Al-Aqsa Mosque,
322
Alexander, Keith,
26
,
151
,
172
,
177
,
230
,
410
Allawi, Ayad,
201
Allen, Woody,
249
Allenby Bridge,
324
Al Nahyan, Mohammed bin Zayed,
431
al-Qaeda (AQ),
12
,
28
,
30
,
31
,
44
–46,
49
,
52
–55,
66
–68,
72
,
74
,
78
,
89
,
96
,
103
,
106
,
109
,
110
,
119
,
136
,
149
,
153
,
173
,
199
,
204
–6,
208
,
215
,
219
,
220
,
223
–26,
228
,
239
,
241
,
280
,
300
,
312
–13,
320
,
322
,
327
,
329
,
334
–49,
352
,
361
,
369
,
374
,
410
e-mails of,
405
Geneva Conventions and,
235
Hadi al Iraqi in,
233
interrogations and,
187
–88,
189
–90,
381
,
384
–85,
393
targeted killing strikes against,
334
–42,
357
al-Shabab,
221
Amash, Justin,
407
–8
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU),
4
,
18
,
131
,
378
–79,
382
American Enterprise Institute,
299
Ames, Aldrich,
278
Amman,
322
–23
Amriki, Azzam al-,
338
Angleton, James Jesus,
277
–78
Annan, Kofi,
421
An Nasiriyah,
58
Antietam,
49
–50
Arak,
308
Army Field Manual,
188
,
191
,
236
–37,
366
n,
367
,
368
,
381
Arnold, Benedict,
427
Articles of Confederation,
430
Art of Intelligence, The
(Crumpton),
122
Ashkenazi, Gabi,
317
–18
Assad, Bashar al-,
257
,
259
–61,
263
–68
Assad, Bassel al-,
259
–60
Assad family,
260
Associated Press,
240
At the Center of the Storm
(Tenet),
122
Atta, Mohamed,
110
Australia, xi,
33
,
37
–38,
164
,
182
Authorization for the Use of Military Force (AUMF),
70
,
89
,
106
,
343
Bad Aibling Station (BAS),
417
–18
Badr Corps,
292
Baghdad,
196
,
197
,
198
,
207
,
212
,
213
,
215
Baghdad Aero Club,
202
Baker, James,
212
Baker, Peter,
369
Baker, Stewart,
413
Balkans,
127
Baluchistan,
304
Bandar bin Sultan, Prince,
321
Barham Salih,
199
–200
Barr, Bob,
19
Basij Resistance Force,
291
,
306
Bayh, Evan,
185
Bay of Pigs,
119
Beamer, Todd,
29
Bearden, Milt,
92
Belgrade,
317
Benghazi attack,
425
Bennett, Bob,
123
Bigelow, Kathryn,
397
Bill of Rights,
430
bin Laden, Osama,
2
,
19
,
49
,
53
,
54
,
116
,
149
,
186
,
206
,
225
,
234
,
320
,
329
,
329
n,
337
,
339
–40,
348
,
373
killing of,
204
–5,
341
,
373
–74,
397
,
398
Birkenau,
318
black sites,
168
,
190
,
193
,
195
,
223
–24,
229
,
233
,
241
,
279
,
367
,
369
,
385
Blair, Denny,
168
,
173
–75,
363
,
383
,
386
Blair, Tony,
372
Blinken, Tony,
356
Blitzer, Wolf,
401
Boal, Mark,
397
Bogotá,
324
–25
Bolten, Josh,
171
Bolton, John,
299
Boston Marathon bombing,
343
Bradbury, Steve,
228
Brennan, John,
151
,
168
,
174
–76,
358
–60,
383
,
387
Britain,
30
,
33
–36,
164
,
207
,
221
–22,
333
n
GCHQ in,
see
GCHQ
Broder, David,
115
Brookings Institution,
402
Brzezinski, Zbigniew,
292
Bubble (CIA auditorium),
185
,
286
,
287
,
431
Bulgaria,
314
–15
Burgess, Ron,
162
Burnie, Glen,
36
Burns, Ken,
200
Bush, George H. W.,
157
–58,
371
,
372
,
393
Bush, George W.,
24
,
120
,
133
,
140
,
157
–58,
161
,
168
,
172
,
176
–78,
188
,
236
,
269
,
319
,
323
,
336
–37,
347
,
357
–59,
366
n,
369
,
371
–76,
395
–96,
402
,
410
,
413
briefings of,
211
,
288
–89,
329
n,
335
,
373
,
376
DNI and,
157
Hayden appointed CIA director by,
181
–82,
184
,
185
,
211
,
284
interrogations and,
193
–94,
379
,
386
Obama as different than,
396
,
410
,
413
Stellarwind and,
25
,
103
,
104
,
110
,
112
,
412
transition to Obama administration from,
354
–77,
379
–80
Bush, Jeb,
400
n
Butler, Bob,
129
Caine Mutiny, The,
175
Cairo,
319
Cambone, Steve,
158
Camp David,
374
–75
Card, Andy,
85
,
87
,
88
,
101
,
104
,
371
Carnegie, Andrew,
246
Carter, Jimmy,
157
Casablanca,
320
Center Ice,
39
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA),
12
,
34
,
38
,
40
,
42
,
43
,
46
,
155
–59,
164
,
167
–68,
217
–42,
271
–89,
354
–77
applicants and new hires at,
273
–75,
276
–77
black sites of,
168
,
190
,
193
,
195
,
223
–24,
229
,
233
,
241
,
279
,
367
,
369
,
385
Bubble auditorium of,
185
,
286
,
287
,
431
coins designed by directors of,
432
contractors and,
287
–88
Counterintelligence Center of,
277
–78,
296
Counterterrorism Center of,
177
n,
238
,
300
,
361
,
389
,
390
,
394
covert actions by,
211
,
226
,
283
,
288
,
373
,
374
,
382
crisis in,
179
–80
criticisms of,
218
culture of,
285
–86
directorates in,
285
–86
family day of,
273
as global enterprise,
310
–30
Hayden appointed director of,
179
–87,
211
,
281
,
284
heritage community recruiting at,
276
–77
interrogations by,
see
interrogations
Jeanine Hayden’s work with,
273
–76
liaison relationships in,
313
–16,
324
,
325
,
328
mission statement of,
272
New York City Police Department and,
325
–27
Office of Medical Services,
275