Arab Times

CIA focuses on US rivals, extremists

Director Haspel outlines agency’s priorities

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LOUISVILLE, Ky, Sept 25, (AP): Recalling her rise through male-dominated ranks, CIA Director Gina Haspel said she wants to champion diversity at the spy agency as she returned to her alma mater Monday for a public event where she outlined her priorities for the agency and disclosed a few personal details of her life.

Haspel delved into some of the United States’ toughest challenges around the world during wide-ranging comments at the University of Louisville. The CIA’s first female director also lifted the veil behind her life, listing some of her favorite Johnny Cash songs, her reading preference­s when not poring through CIA briefings and her most memorable celebrity encounter. That would be Queen Elizabeth, and yes, the queen knew she was a CIA operative.

“The queen is extremely wellbriefe­d,” Haspel told the audience.

She flashed a sense of humor, noting a real-life undercover officer would be better suited in a “beige Hyundai” than a flashy sports car as portrayed in movies. And the native of Ashland, Kentucky, revealed her fondness for Kentucky bourbon as a gift to visiting foreign officials.

While touting her Kentucky roots, Haspel grew up around the world as the daughter of an Air Force serviceman. She worked in Africa, Europe and classified locations around the globe and was tapped as deputy director of the CIA last year. She worked under former CIA director Mike Pompeo until President Donald Trump moved him to secretary of state.

Haspel recalled moments that helped put her career on its trajectory – her first meeting with a foreign agent who passed along intelligen­ce during a rendezvous in a “remote and desolate place,” and the nights spent sleeping on the floor while station chief in a small “frontier post.”

Baltimore, Chicago, Houston, Kansas City, Milwaukee, Philadelph­ia and Washington.

In comparison, Brazil saw 30 murders per 100,000 inhabitant­s in 2016, Russia had 11, while France, Italy and Germany had one, according to World Bank figures. (AFP)

Cost caps sought for N-project:

The nation’s only major nuclear power plant

The CIA was male-dominated then, she said, but she was lucky to have bosses willing to take a chance on her.

Through the years, the CIA has “become a better place to work” for all its officers, but the agency still “has a way to go,” Haspel said. One of her priorities is to champion diversity in recruiting officers of all genders, races and cultures.

“Our global mission at CIA demands that we recruit and retain America’s best and brightest, regardless of gender, race or cultural background,” she said. “And I want every officer to have equal opportunit­ies to succeed.”

The Senate confirmed her in May to lead the spy agency. She told the Louisville audience that another top priority is to invest more heavily in collecting intelligen­ce against nation state adversarie­s as well as Islamic extremists.

Efforts

“Our efforts against these difficult intelligen­ce gaps have been overshadow­ed over the years by the intelligen­ce community’s justifiabl­e heavy emphasis on counterter­rorism in the wake of 9/11,” she said. “Groups such as the so-called Islamic State and al-Qaeda remain squarely in our sights, but we are sharpening our focus on nation state adversarie­s.”

Haspel said she also is working to invest in foreign-language training to make sure CIA officers are attuned to the cultures where they work. Another one of her priorities is to increase the number of officers stationed overseas.

She said the CIA also is working to beef up counter narcotics efforts abroad to address the nation’s opioid crisis.

During a question-and-answer session, she listed London and Istanbul as her favorite overseas cities and confessed to enjoying lighter reading fare during spare time. One of her most recent reads was “Hillbilly Elegy.”

under constructi­on appears to still be alive as the three owners seek to hash out conditions that one of them set on the project, now years over schedule and billions of dollars over budget.

Oglethorpe Power on Monday said it’s only willing to move forward with the constructi­on of the two new reactors at the Vogtle nuclear power plant near Waynesboro, Georgia, if cost caps are

Prosecutor Jody Gleason points to a medical examiner’s diagram showing the wounds to Laquan McDonald, during a trial of Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke for the shooting death of Laquan McDonald at the Leighton Criminal Court Building in Chicago on Sept 24, 2018. Lawyers for the white Chicago police officer charged with murder in the shooting of McDonald, a black teenager, opened their defense case Monday with a witness questionin­g the thoroughne­ss and accuracy of the autopsy. (AP)

She was asked about problem spots around the world. On North Korea, Haspel said she thinks Pyongyang views its nuclear weapons program as leverage and a key to the survival of its government.

“I don’t think that they want to give it up easily,” Haspel said shortly before Trump said that a second summit with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un was likely to occur “quite soon.”

Haspel said, however, that she believes the US is in a better place than during North Korea’s unpreceden­ted level of testing last year “because of the dialogue we’ve establishe­d between our two leaders.”

On China, Haspel said the CIA was monitoring Beijing’s global ambitions, including its investment­s in Africa, Latin America, the Pacific Islands and South Asia.

“They want to be dominant in the Asia-Pacific region, of course, and unfortunat­ely they are working to diminish US influence in order to advance their own goals in the region,” she said.

On Iran, she said the Iranian people are suffering from economic problems because their economy has been mismanaged. She said she has been surprised at the amount of money Iran is spending to prop up the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad and expand its influence in Iraq.

Haspel’s appearance was part of the McConnell Center’s speaker series at UofL. The center is named for Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who on Monday said Haspel’s “unrivaled expertise is helping secure America’s position on the world stage.”

Haspel’s appearance drew protests from a small group of students who chanted in the rain while huddled under umbrellas. They cited her past role supervisin­g a covert detention site in Thailand where terror suspects were waterboard­ed, an interrogat­ion technique that simulates drowning.

implemente­d.

It is unclear how the other utilities that own a stake will respond to the conditions. They’ve set a deadline of 5 p.m. Tuesday to come to an agreement.

The Municipal Electric Authority of Georgia and Georgia Southern had previously said it’s willing to push forward.

A down vote by Oglethorpe Power could sink the project, which now has a total estimated cost of $27 billion.

Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal took to Twitter on Monday to urge Oglethorpe to vote to continue. He called on the utility to “to reconsider its decision before walking away from 7,000 GA jobs.” (AP)

WWII codebreake­r buried:

A 92-yearold woman has been buried in Nebraska with British military honors for a secret that she held for decades: her World War II service as a codebreake­r of German intelligen­ce communicat­ions.

The Omaha World-Herald reports that the Union Jack was draped over Jean Briggs Watters’ casket during her burial Monday. Watters died Sept 15.

The tribute honored Watters for her role decoding for a top-secret military program led by British mathematic­ian Alan Turing, who was the subject of the 2014 Oscar-winning film, “The Imitation Game .” Watters was among about 10,000 people, mostly women, who participat­ed in the Allied effort to crack German communicat­ion codes throughout the war.

Watters was 18 when she enlisted in the Women’s Royal Naval Service. She and her husband retired to the US in 1969. (AP)

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