|
Panetta's charm offensive on Capitol Hill has defused the tension of his early tenure, when he clashed with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. She'd said the CIA lied to her, allegedly withholding details about waterboarding in a briefing years earlier. Panetta defended the agency fiercely. Now Panetta can be spotted, with his small security entourage, in the warren-like halls of Congress, heading to monthly coffees he's instituted with the House and Senate intelligence committees. The intelligence chief also extends prized invitations to meals at his private dining room, next to his office on the seventh floor of CIA headquarters in Langley, Va., much as the president issues coveted offers of visits to the Oval Office. These dinners are marked by the informality of a big Italian-American family get-together, with frequent jokes and colorful language
-- disarming for journalists and legislators alike. Panetta so won over the heads of the congressional intelligence committees that they called for him to replace Blair
-- a job Panetta turned down, former officials say, because he likes working at the CIA too much. Panetta helped stave off congressional investigations into alleged CIA misdeeds, like the secret detention of suspects in Italy, which left a trail of evidence that Italian investigators revealed in court.
But he could not save the agency from the ongoing investigation into the destruction of videotapes of terror suspects undergoing waterboarding and other "enhanced interrogation methods." The specter of prosecution by the current administration for deeds sanctioned by a previous administration has had a chilling effect on morale, said former CIA officer Bob Baer. He pointed out that since some of the litigation during the Bush administration, CIA officers have been advised to take out lawsuit insurance when they join the agency. Panetta has tackled the morale problem by racking up 100,000-plus frequent flyer miles, visiting some 40 CIA stations and bases in more than two dozen countries. His role is part father figure and part cheerleader, and he plays it for a team that Baer says feels it are under fire
-- figuratively at home, literally abroad. Panetta supported allowing the families of the dead in the December 2009 suicide bomb attack at Khost, Afghanistan, to release the names of their loved ones
-- at least, the names of those who hadn't been working undercover. Seven CIA employees were killed in that attack. They were honored with stars on the wall in the CIA's marbled entryway
-- tributes to CIA officers whose names only rarely are revealed. "Our officers are on the front lines," Panetta said to a group of agency staffers overseas, in remarks obtained by The Associated Press. "You can't overestimate how important you are." His solemn comments contrasted sharply with the dining room banter on "Top Chef," and were more in line with what the agency expects from its leader. Perhaps that's why it was almost a relief when an aide interrupted the filming by handing Panetta a note. He read it, arched his eyebrows, and excused himself from the table, saying, "Business calls."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries
Community |
Perspectives
|
Law & Courts |
Leisure Time
|
Spiritual Life |
Health & Fitness |
Teen Scene
Calendar
|
Letters to the Editor