The Mercury News

Haspel is too qualified to pass up as first woman director of CIA

- By Marc A. Thiessen Marc Thiessen is a Washington Post columnist.

WASHINGTON » It was one of the Clinton administra­tion’s biggest counterter­rorism successes. Just weeks after al-Qaida terrorists trained by Iran blew up U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998, Gina Haspel’s phone rang in the middle of the night. She was in her final weeks as station chief in what the CIA describes as an “exotic and tumultuous capital” in central Eurasia, and intelligen­ce had just emerged that two senior al-Qaida associates linked to the embassy bombings were on their way to the country where she was stationed.

Haspel swung into action, devising an operation to capture the terrorists. She worked around the clock, sleeping on the floor of her office, as agents tracked the terrorists to a local hotel, where the men were apprehende­d after a firefight. According to the CIA, “The successful operation not only led to the terrorists’ arrest and subsequent imprisonme­nt, but to the seizure of computers that contained details of a terrorist plot.” For her efforts during the operation, which ultimately disrupted a terrorist cell, Haspel in 1999 received the George H.W. Bush Award for Excellence in Counterter­rorism.

This is as much as the CIA has revealed, but according to press accounts, several senior al-Qaida associates were captured in Baku, Azerbaijan, just weeks after the embassy bombings. They included Ihab Saqr, a top lieutenant of al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahiri, and Essam Marzouk, who also worked for Zawahiri and had trained two of the embassy bombers. Mossad, Israel’s national intelligen­ce agency, had reportedly intercepte­d signals indicating that Saqr was headed to Baku to meet an Iranian intelligen­ce operative.

We should be thrilled that the woman behind this major counterter­rorism success has been nominated to become the first female director of the CIA — and only the second person ever to rise to the agency’s top post after spending her entire career in clandestin­e operations. But instead of being grateful that a seasoned, experience­d intelligen­ce operative has been chosen, Senate Democrats are threatenin­g to kill her nomination.

This is insane. Haspel is quite possibly the most qualified person ever nominated to lead the CIA. She has experience in virtually every agency discipline, from counterter­rorism to counterint­elligence and offensive intelligen­ce operations — including personally recruiting spies and directing covert operations.

“She has served in some really tough places, highrisk hardship posts, and has performed some extraordin­ary operations,” said former CIA official Henry “Hank” Crumpton, who was Haspel’s boss in the agency’s National Resources Division. According to a source familiar with her career, Haspel was once deployed in a conflict zone, when military officials from a hostile nation arrived without warning at an event she was attending. As she left, they fired at her vehicle, blowing out a tire. She still keeps the bullet as a reminder of the risks CIA officers take each day to protect the country. For her, some of the stars on the CIA’s Memorial Wall represent the names and faces of friends she has lost in the line of duty.

“She’s truly a spymaster,” said one retired senior intelligen­ce official who knows Haspel well. “She has earned great respect from intelligen­ce leaders around the world; even people like Putin would have to respect her operationa­l savvy.” Yet despite her many accomplish­ments, colleagues say, she is a paragon of humility with zero political ambition. “She’s never lobbied for a job,” one of her former CIA bosses told me. “The jobs searched for her.”

Little wonder that so many senior Obama-era intelligen­ce officials have urged the Senate to confirm her. To vote down someone so obviously qualified as political retributio­n for the CIA’s now-defunct interrogat­ion program would be a travesty. President Barack Obama’s Justice Department concluded that no crimes had been committed.

Democrats complain that President Trump has repeatedly attacked our intelligen­ce community. But derailing Haspel’s nomination would be a greater attack on our intelligen­ce profession­als than anything Trump has done. Haspel is beloved by the CIA’s rank and file because she is one of them. Were the Senate to reject her, the nominee’s former colleague said, “It would send a really chilling, devastatin­g message.”

Haspel, and the men and women of the CIA, deserve better.

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