I think if the left is rushing to defend the CIA to any degree it's out of their zeal to blame Bush, despite where responsibilities might actually lie.
It is this same zeal that forces the left to ironically embrace the glory of a Vietnam military record over a draft dodger.
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The CIA has an impossible assignment. They are handed a totally gone to shit situation and told to make it right via intelligence and covert ops...
..Forget the CIA. Zoom out. Look where they fit in the picture. Change the picture, if it needs changing.
Saying the CIA has an impossible job is only true insofar as the police have an impossible job, or the FBI have an impossible job. The police could never catch all the criminals that exist, the FBI could never investigate all federal crimes that are ongoing, and the CIA could never gather all useful intelligence that there is to gather.
There are two relevant points. One is that the CIA is very useful at gathering and countering intelligence-gathering against other governments and para-military organizations.
The other point is that the larger the organization (the more state-like it is in size and scope) the more likely there is to be intelligence about official plots that could threaten the United States which can be gathered using an aparatus like the CIA.
If there is a smattering of independent resistance cells in Iraq, or worse yet an underground, popular uprising, you're right that they might have a hopeless job. Just because they might be ill suited at the moment in Iraq doesn't negate their usefulness. My guess is the insurgents may not always know the master plan in Iraq, so how could the CIA found out what the enemy doesn't even know? If the terror attacks are crimes of opportunity, then there could never be a good way to prevent them.
The real problem the CIA is facing is a perception problem. If al-Qaeda today were operating as a centralized, top-down organization as they apparently were for the 9-11 plot, they might be taken to task on infiltrating and confounding them. As best as I understand, al-Qaeda is effectively decentralized, thanks in large part to the war in Afghanistan.
The problem we face today is that wherever terrorism pops up, immediately it's dubbed "al-Qaeda". This might serve as a clarion call to war against them, but suggesting that they are part of a grand scheme, still orchestrated from the remote mountainous regions of central Asia both grossly over-estimates the power of the enemy to organize, and grossly over-tasks the CIA to stop all para-military terror actions.
The CIA could be taken to task to enter a chess match with a rival intelligence agency. It simply can't be taken to task to combat complete anarchy and chaos.
And I feel this is what is being done when al-Qaeda sympathetic, but officially unconnected, terror organizations are dubbed "al-Qaeda".
In this situation I am reminded of a political cartoon that appeared around the time of Israel's Six Day War. In the cartoon Israeli forces -for their own security- pushed deep into the Himalayas, and were meeting resistance. "Would you believe it," one of the soldiers says "anti-semitism..even here!"
I think the cry of al-Qaeda is becoming our anti-semitism. The problem I see, boorite, isn't that the CIA is ill-equipped, but that the perception is they should be tasked to deal with this broad, impromptu terrorism under the perception that it is all al-Qaeda.
A last point in defense of the CIA. Moreso than most other organizations, you never hear about their successes. And to the extent that other nations might be sponsoring terror in Iraq to hurt the U.S., you might never hear that the CIA is having success in combatting or identifying the sources of these attacks.
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Vote Jeb Bush 2008