WASHINGTON -- The resignations of two more senior CIA officials yesterday fueled debate in the intelligence community over whether the agency is tumbling into turmoil under new director Porter J. Goss or is taking painful but necessary steps toward fixing serious problems.
In the latest in a series of high-profile departures, the top two officials in the CIA's clandestine service quit after clashing with one of Goss's senior aides.
Stephen R. Kappes, the deputy director for operations, and his deputy, Michael J. Sulick, each had served in the agency for 23 years. But both are leaving just weeks into Goss's tenure amid signs of increasing acrimony between the agency's old guard and what critics describe as an often abrasive new regime.
The departures alarmed agency veterans who say morale is plummeting under Goss's stewardship and that the agency is increasingly in disarray at a time when it is struggling to stay abreast of terrorist threats and the insurgency in Iraq.
Senator John D. "Jay" Rockefeller IV of West Virginia, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, expressed concern that the drain of talent and ensuing confusion could spin out of control.
"Goss must take immediate steps to stabilize the situation at the CIA," Rockefeller said in a statement. "There is no doubt that changes needed to take place at the CIA. . . . However, the departure of highly respected and competent individuals at such a crucial time is a grave concern."
Even some critics of Goss said they were dismayed by the agency's reaction to the arrival of its first new director in more than seven years. They accused senior CIA officials of seeking to undermine Goss and thwart his efforts to overhaul an agency guilty of massive intelligence failures leading up to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and the war in Iraq.
Those sources pointed to damaging information that was leaked to the media about Michael Kostiw, Goss's nominee for executive director of the agency. Kostiw withdrew from consideration for that job after the
Recent years have been a litany of "how screwed up the CIA is, and somebody goes in to change things and suddenly it's the end of the world," said a longtime Goss associate who has spoken with the director's senior aides.
Kappes and other senior officers "completely cold-shouldered Porter Goss when he came in," said the former government official, who asked not to be identified.
Some CIA critics contend that still more departures are necessary to bring to heel an agency many Republicans accuse of seeking to sandbag Bush during the recent presidential campaign by leaking information critical of the decision to invade Iraq.
The agency's deputy director, John E. McLaughlin, announced his plans to retire Friday, and the CIA's former executive director, A.B. "Buzzy" Krongard, was forced out shortly after Goss arrived. Another senior official, Michael Scheuer -- the former chief of the agency's Osama bin Laden unit who wrote a book critical of the agency's terrorism response -- quit last week. His departure was apparently unrelated to the new regime.
Goss did not address the turmoil at the agency in a statement late yesterday, saying only that Kappes and Sulick had "honorably served their nation and this agency with distinction for many years."
Before arriving at the CIA in September, Goss had criticized the agency, calling it "dysfunctional" and vowing to overhaul it.![]()