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- <text id=93TT1982>
- <title>
- July 05, 1993: Interview:John le Carre
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 05, 1993 Hitting Back At Terrorists
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- INTERVIEW, Page 32
- "We Distorted Our Own Minds"
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>John le Carre, author of The Night Manager, talks about today's
- spies and his past career in intelligence
- </p>
- <p>By WALTER ISAACSON and JAMES KELLY
- </p>
- <p> John le Carre
- </p>
- <p> Q. If you were the director of the CIA, what priorities would
- you set for the next decade?
- </p>
- <p> A. What I would require of my intelligence service would be
- a real liaison with major existing intelligence services on
- shared targets. That would include terrorism and nuclear weapons,
- all these loose cannons we've got sloshing around in Ukraine.
- If some crazed national movement got hold of nuclear weapons,
- then I think there should be a joint effort among intelligence
- agencies that should be pooled by the United Nations.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Won't countries be reluctant to share intelligence data with
- one another through the U.N.?
- </p>
- <p> A. Those are barriers which somehow or another have to be dismantled.
- Those are our cold war manners. Of course, all intelligence
- services like to retain their mystique. The first thing the
- Americans do if they get a wonderful report from the Israelis
- is edit it, retitle it, put all sorts of stamps all over it
- and shove it upstairs. This is another reason, incidentally,
- why intelligence assessments are so frequently distorted: the
- same source can fund a whole lot of seemingly separate intelligence
- documents. Let's say, the Israelis prepare a document which
- they're prepared to give to an American liaison. They're also
- prepared to give another version of this same intelligence to
- the French. The French receive it and immediately signal some
- of it for economic gain to the Syrians. Then the National Security
- Agency comes in, intercepts France to Damascus, and there you
- get corroboration of the intelligence which has already come
- through from the same source. It's the proof cooked three different
- ways, but has actually come from the same source.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Intelligence gathering by human spies is now coming back
- into vogue. Wouldn't that be far more effective than satellites
- in a place like Somalia?
- </p>
- <p> A. That would be great, but you've really got to buy somebody
- who is there. You've got to deal through intermediaries you
- know. You're going through a whole ladder of contacts--you
- end up sending a gold vase to a motel on the road to Mogadishu--you never see the gold vase again--you never get any intelligence.
- It requires a street wisdom suddenly in a particular area which
- is terribly hard for an intelligence service to produce when
- the President suddenly says, "Get me that damned warlord."
- </p>
- <p> Q. One of the great intelligence debacles of the cold war was
- the overestimation of the Soviet Union's capabilities. How did
- that happen?
- </p>
- <p> A. I think it was a failure of intelligence and, in a curious
- way, a failure of common sense. The overkill of coverage was
- so immense that they literally started counting the cows twice,
- that when you have huge amounts of data coming in, it's very
- easy to lose count as simply as that. But the failure of common
- sense is absolutely weird in its stupidity. Any good journalist
- who'd been living in Moscow in the later years of Brezhnev would
- know that nothing worked anymore. The knight was dying inside
- his armor, and somehow that human perception never made itself
- felt in intelligence analyses.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Is there something inherent about spying that causes spies
- not to see the bigger picture?
- </p>
- <p> A. Absolutely. If you live in secrecy, you think in secrecy.
- It is the very nature of the life you lead as an intelligence
- officer in a secret room that the ordinary winds of common sense
- don't blow through it. You are constantly looking to relate
- to your enemy in intellectual, adversarial and conspiratorial
- terms. It is absolutely necessary to the intelligence mentality
- that you put the worst interpretation upon your adversary.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Did our obsession with secrecy hurt our own governments?
- </p>
- <p> A. I believe that's exactly what we did to ourselves. We really
- did entrench anticommunism and enforce it in ways that in my
- view were catastrophic. We distorted our own minds; it was almost
- a precursor of political correctness in its worst form.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Catastrophic is a pretty strong word.
- </p>
- <p> A. It is a strong word. The post-cold war trauma that we identify
- in the former Soviet Union, perhaps less dramatically and less
- scarily, is among us too. We've had removed from us a system
- of priorities in thinking and responding which has left us for
- the moment rather inarticulate and undirected in our collective
- thinking. We have squandered the peace that we've won with the
- cold war. We had some kind of vision in the cold war; we got
- a crusade going even when we were mistaken and crude about it.
- </p>
- <p> I think there was never a time when we needed rhetoric so badly,
- when we needed a new romantic dream. I see at the moment, and
- I hope it's only an intervening moment in our world history,
- a time of absolute moral failure by the West to perceive its
- own role in the future. Since we have now contrived to unscrew
- the binding shackles of communism, I think we have to be ready
- to pick up the bits, and I think we have to be ready fairly
- often to respond extremely quickly to brush-fire wars and things
- of that sort.
- </p>
- <p> Q. In the end, was cold war espionage counterproductive or productive
- in helping us preserve our national security?
- </p>
- <p> A. If I had to cast a stone into one bucket or the other, I
- would say it was counter-productive. Now if we had been angels,
- if we had been superwise, we would have re alized that our
- resources would have been much better deployed showing ourselves
- to be constitutionally impeccable and not worrying about the
- few traitors and fewer spies you inevitably let through the
- net. It was a war that had to be fought, but it was not the
- war that won the whole campaign. Indeed, what espionage looks
- like now is what it always was: a sideshow got up as major theater.
- </p>
- <p> Where I kick myself is where I think I actually contributed
- to the myth of the intelligence services as being very good.
- When I wrote The Spy Who Came In from the Cold, the head of
- operations at the Secret Intelligence Service remarked that
- it was the only bloody double agent that ever worked. The mythmaking
- that went on all around us contributed to the kind of ingrown
- and corrosive self-perceptions that were at the heart of our
- undoing.
- </p>
- <p> Q. You worked in British intelligence as a young man. How do
- you look back upon those years now?
- </p>
- <p> A. I was recruited almost when I was still in diapers into that
- world. My really formative years, the years when one should
- be having nice little love affairs and doing different jobs
- and finding out who one shouldn't be and that stuff, they were
- all taken over by the secret world. The moods that I remember,
- the self-perceptions I had, were very positive, very negative;
- I was brilliant, I was a complete idiot. I entered it in the
- spirit of John Buchan and left it in the spirit of Kafka.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Was there a particular incident that formed your view of
- espionage?
- </p>
- <p> A. I remember one episode where I was obliged to interrogate
- a British official about his alleged involvement in an espionage
- ring, and he lied to me. He just lied all the way through. I
- made a very reasoned submission to my superiors and went on
- to other things and discovered to my astonishment a few months
- later, this man had been promoted. So I was terribly worried,
- and I started to shake the bars. Finally I was taken aside and
- told to ask no more questions about the matter. And of course
- years later I realized that he had been our man, our informant,
- inside the ring that we had penetrated. Therefore I was actually
- simply part of his cover story. All they wanted me to do was
- rubber-stamp him so he could get on with his life again.
- </p>
- <p> Q. How do you ensure that the spies remain honest brokers of
- intelligence and don't try to distort it for their own ends?
- </p>
- <p> A. What we've seen again and again, when there's been a Watergate
- or there's been something else, is this curious mixture that
- includes the real zealots who believe they can repair the inadequacies
- of the democratic system by doing unofficial things. They think
- they're the heroes. Then you see the total misfits who need
- to take shelter in secret rooms and who actually get off being
- secretive.
- </p>
- <p> It is actually only very excited, overstimulated men on very
- short sleep, together with all the toys of supersecrecy and
- the helicopters and the special passes, that inevitably produce
- irrational behavior. But those people, when they began, were
- ordinary guys; they were like us. Noel Annan, who was in British
- intelligence for years, said nobody should be allowed to do
- it more than three years, that one way of keeping an intelligence
- service sane is to have it run entirely by temporary people.
- </p>
- <p> Q. When the cold war ended, did you feel any nostalgia?
- </p>
- <p> A. I didn't have nostalgia, but I went through some of the trauma
- that the spooks had definitely been through. Was there nothing
- there? Maybe it was all a waste of life. Maybe I should have
- just been running a boy's club. I had this weird kind of sub-life
- in some part of my head, where I sort of kept up with events
- from a spy's-eye view. I was never a very good spook; I was
- definitely a writer who took up spying rather than a spy who
- took up writing.
- </p>
- <p> Q. So you were happy to see the cold war end...
- </p>
- <p> A. Yeah, I was thrilled. Part of my present indignation is
- that I want the world to be a better place now. I think the
- Americans have the energy and the record and the right to conduct
- the altruistic crusade. I think it's totally incorrect politically
- to suggest it, but a new period of altruistic white colonialism
- is upon us.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Pax Americana Moralistica?
- </p>
- <p> A. Yes, a little bit, although I don't think it need be as expansive
- as we fear. I don't see you sort of ferrying your armed police
- all over the world keeping order. I think it's much more how
- you throw your weight in the world arena politically, and how
- you demonstrate your outrage at flagrant misbehavior in places
- where it can be stopped.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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