Location: The Heritage Foundation's Lehrman Auditorium
Since the attacks on September 11, 2001, intelligence collection
has become an even more crucial element in the effort to defeat al
Qaeda and Osama bin Laden. A plot penetrated is an attack
stopped. And, to the outside observer, the CIA has performed
well as a key partner in the Bush Administration's War on
Terror. Rowan Scarborough would argue, however, that
significant elements within the CIA are undermining both the
President and national security through leaks, false allegations,
and outright sabotage.
Using sources in all levels of national security - from field
officers to high-ranking analysts to former intelligence heads -
Scarborough presents a disturbing picture of partisan politics
endangering the success of our campaigns abroad and the very lives
of our soldiers and agents. In his view, the agency has
become increasingly political and digressed from its job of being a
scrupulously nonpartisan collector of facts.
Rowan Scarborough reports on national security for the
Washington Examiner. A Navy veteran, he covered the
Pentagon for the Washington Times for nearly two decades,
where he was noted for breaking news. He is the author of the
New York Times bestseller Rumsfeld's War and has been
featured often on radio and television shows.
More About the Speakers
Rowan Scarborough
Author
Hosted By
John Hilboldt
Director, Lectures & Seminars
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