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Intelligence

VOICE OF AMERICA
SLUG: 2-316434 (CQ) Tenet Resigns React (L-Wrap)
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=6/3/04

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

TITLE=TENET RESIGNS / REACT (L-WRAP) (CQ)

NUMBER=2-316434

BYLINE=DEBORAH TATE

DATELINE=CAPITOL HILL

CONTENT=

VOICED AT:

/// RE-RUNNING TO CORRECT YEAR IN SECOND TO LAST PARAGRAPH; SHOULD BE 1997 ///

INTRO: The resignation of Central Intelligence Director George Tenet has prompted bipartisan calls for reforming U-S intelligence agencies. Correspondent Deborah Tate reports from Capitol Hill.

TEXT: Mr. Tenet's decision to step down comes amid controversies over intelligence lapses relating to Iraq and the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States.

In a speech to C-I-A employees, Mr. Tenet said his decision is purely personal, but he acknowledged the difficulties his agency faced in recent years.

/// TENET ACTUALITY ///

Our record is not without flaws. The world of intelligence is uniquely a human endeavor, and as in all human endeavors, we all understand the need to always do better. We are not perfect, but one of our best kept secrets is that we are very, very, very good. Whatever our shortcomings, the American people know we constantly evaluate our performance, always strive to do better, and always tell the truth.

/// END ACT ///

At the White House, President Bush said he is sorry to see Mr. Tenet go.

/// BUSH ACT ///

He has been a strong and able leader at the agency. He has been a strong leader in the war on terror.

/// END ACT ///

Mr. Bush's presumed Democratic challenger for president, Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, issued a written statement saying Mr. Tenet's resignation is an opportunity to reshape the U-S intelligence community and create a new director of national intelligence to oversee all intelligence agencies.

He called on the Bush administration to take responsibility for what he called "significant intelligence failures," which have occurred during Mr. Tenet's tenure.

Similar comments were made by the top Democrat in the House of Representatives, Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi of California.

/// PELOSI ACT ///

There certainly were intelligence failures in the Iraq operation, particularly in the months preceding the invasion. There have been many other failures, as well. I do not believe the resignation of George Tenet should be the only response to those failures.

/// END ACT ///

Republicans, too, see an opportunity for reforming intelligence agencies. The chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Senator Pat Roberts of Kansas spoke to the issue shortly before the announcement of Mr. Tenet's resignation.

/// ROBERTS ACT ///

/// OPT /// I think that the community is somewhat in denial over the full extent, and I emphasize full extent, of the shortcoming of its work in Iraq, and also nine-eleven (the terrorist attacks on the United States on September 11, 2001). /// END OPT /// We need fresh thinking within the community, especially within the Congress, to enable the

intelligence community to change and adapt to the dangerous world in which we live, and for all of us, all of us, to look in the mirror, and honestly examine our collective performance over the past decade.

/// END ACT ///

Mr. Tenet has been under fire for months in connection with intelligence failures related to the U-S-led war in Iraq and the September 11th attacks. Critics say he and other members of the administration failed to fully appreciate the threat posed by al-Qaida prior to the terrorist

attacks on New York and Washington, and overestimated the threat from Iraq.

But Mr. Tenet is also credited with building morale and providing stability at the C-I-A, which had three directors in the five years before him.

/// OPT /// Senator Charles Schumer is a New York Democrat:

/// SCHUMER OPT ACT ///

I think Tenet did more than anybody else to try to move the C-I-A along into the 21st century, when so many obstacles had been thrown in its path previously.

/// END ACT /// END OPT ///

At a House committee hearing, the director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Robert Mueller, praised Mr. Tenet's service at the C-I-A:

/// MUELLER ACT ///

In my experience working with him, he has sought at every turn to bridge the gap between the C-I-A and the F-B-I, and he has always been concerned about one thing, one goal, and one goal only, and that is the safety of the American public.

/// END ACT ///

Mr. Tenet, who was nominated by President Bush's Democratic predecessor Bill Clinton in 1997, is one of the longest-serving C-I-A directors in U-S history.

Mr. Tenet will serve until mid-July, when Deputy C-I-A Director John McLaughlin will temporarily take over, until a successor is nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate. (SIGNED)

NEB/DAT/TW/KL



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