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- <text id=94TT1455>
- <title>
- Oct. 24, 1994: Intelligence:Wouldn't Know a Mole
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 24, 1994 Boom for Whom?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- INTELLIGENCE, Page 49
- They Wouldn't Know a Mole If It Bit Them
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Classified reports show how ineptly the CIA handled Aldrich
- Ames, its most damaging turncoat in decades
- </p>
- <p>By Elaine Shannon/Washington--With reporting by James L. Graff/Vienna and Douglas Waller/Washington
- </p>
- <p> As a rookie spy, he left a briefcase stuffed with classified
- documents on a New York City subway train. He strewed clandestine
- communications gear around his office, unsecured. He couldn't
- account for Company money or for himself. His falling-down-drunk
- episodes were legion, including one at a CIA Christmas party
- when he had to be carted home. Even when sober, he had incompetence
- written all over him. A pre-employment psychological assessment
- found him lacking the people skills essential for spy work.
- Yet the CIA, desperate for warm bodies during the Vietnam War,
- hired him anyway. His first boss, the station chief in Ankara,
- Turkey, warned that the new agent was so inept at recruiting
- agents that he should never be sent to the field again.
- </p>
- <p> That wise counsel was ignored, as was a profusion of red flags
- that marked the sorry career of Aldrich Hazen Ames, 53, who
- was finally convicted last April after spying nine years for
- the Soviet Union. Intelligence documents obtained last week
- by TIME, including parts of the CIA inspector general's report
- on the Ames case, illustrate how badly the agency bungled its
- handling of the agent. Strong evidence of his poor performance,
- and later his treason, were ignored for years by an old-boy
- network that included friends of Ames' father Carleton, himself
- a hard-drinking CIA veteran.
- </p>
- <p> Tensions between the Old Guard and CIA Director James Woolsey,
- a political appointee, erupted last week when Woolsey learned
- that two top agency officials had on Sept. 29 given an award
- to a retiring field officer under investigation in the Ames
- case. That agent, Milton Bearden, who has retired as chief of
- the CIA station in Bonn, is widely respected for his work in
- helping Muslim rebels drive Soviet troops out of Afghanistan.
- But Bearden has also been reprimanded for his inattention to
- Ames' activities when he was the spy's boss in 1989. Woolsey
- had ordered that none of those reprimanded in the Ames case
- be given promotions, raises or commendations. Last week he demoted
- the officers who violated that order; both men then retired
- rather than accept a lower rank.
- </p>
- <p> Members of Congress who oversee the CIA viewed the episode as
- a characteristic case of arrogance within the agency's Directorate
- of Operations, the branch in charge of covert missions. And,
- said a White House official, "What we can't understand is why
- Woolsey keeps loyally defending an operations directorate that
- keeps thumbing its nose at him. He needs to clean house." Critics
- will gain ammunition from the fresh details contained in classified
- documents. Among them:
- </p>
- <p> Ames devised a crude but effective cover scheme so that he could
- approach the KGB without arousing the suspicions of FBI agents.
- In April 1985 he arranged to meet with Sergei Chuvakin, then
- a Soviet embassy diplomat. (Chuvakin, who now works for the
- Russian Foreign Ministry, told TIME's James L. Graff that he
- doesn't recall meeting the U.S. spy.) Ames says he told Chuvakin
- that he had an innocuous reason for the meeting: to discuss
- broad foreign policy issues. At the same time, Ames told the
- CIA and the FBI that he was trying to recruit Chuvakin. But
- Ames failed to file regular and detailed reports of his meetings
- with Chuvakin. If CIA managers had monitored him more closely,
- they might have discovered his ruse. In fact, Ames told the
- CIA's investigators this year, he used the unwitting Soviet
- as cover to pass a message to the KGB. When he called for Chuvakin
- at the Soviet embassy, Ames, without uttering a word, slipped
- the receptionist an envelope addressed to the senior KGB officer
- there. The packet contained the names of three Soviets who had
- offered to work for the CIA, and whom the CIA knew to be "dangles,"
- or double agents who remained loyal to the U.S.S.R. This helped
- establish Ames' access to secrets, as did a page ripped from
- a CIA directory (which is not available to the public) with
- his name highlighted. The last item was a demand for $50,000.
- </p>
- <p> When the KGB ponied up the $50,000, Ames told investigators,
- he was hooked. In June 1985 he crammed 5 to 7 lbs. of secret
- documents into plastic bags, toted them past the security guards
- at CIA headquarters and delivered the bags to the KGB. Inside
- was the stuff of spies' dreams: the names of 10 Soviets who
- had been recruited by Western intelligence agencies to steal
- secrets from Soviet military, intelligence or political establishments.
- </p>
- <p> For a while, the Ames betrayals prompted CIA officials to suspect
- that the Soviets were intercepting their communications, so
- they transmitted a series of false messages to a field office,
- hoping to provoke the KGB into reacting. Nothing happened, which
- should have prompted the CIA into looking elsewhere, but the
- agency, reluctant to believe one of its own was a traitor, failed
- to launch a rigorous investigation.
- </p>
- <p> Finally, in January 1986 the chief of the Soviet division in
- the CIA's Directorate of Operations realized there might be
- a human leak, so he sharply reduced access to the most valuable
- secrets, setting up a "back room" to handle sensitive cases
- against the Soviets. There was just one problem: among the handful
- of officers with access to the back room was Aldrich Ames.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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