CIA Retracts 19 Intelligence Reports Over Bias Concerns

Washington: The CIA has formally withdrawn or ordered revisions to 19 intelligence products after an internal and independent review found they did not meet the agencyās analytic standards and āfailed to be independent of political considerationā, the agency has said.
CIA Director John Ratcliffe, in an official release, said the products, produced over the past decade, āfall short of the high standards of impartiality that CIA must uphold and do not reflect the expertise for which our analysts are renownedā.
The unusual move includes the retraction of 17 reports and the recall of two others for substantial revision, according to The Washington Post. The reports will be deleted from CIA databases and will no longer be available to US policymakers.
The products were identified by the Presidentās Intelligence Advisory Board (PIAB), which reviewed hundreds of CIA analytic reports from the past decade. An internal review led by Deputy Director Michael Ellis concurred with the findings.
Director Ratcliffe released redacted versions of three reports cited as examples. They include āWomen Advancing White Racially and Ethnically Motivated Violent Extremist Radicalization and Recruitmentā, published October 6, 2021; āMiddle East-North Africa: LGBT Activists Under Pressureā, published January 14, 2015; and āWorldwide: Pandemic-Related Contraceptive Shortfalls Threaten Economic Development,ā published on July 8, 2020.
āThe intelligence products we released to the American people today ā produced before my tenure as DCIA ā fall short of the high standards of impartiality that CIA must uphold and do not reflect the expertise for which our analysts are renowned,ā Ratcliffe stated.
āThere is absolutely no room for bias in our work, and when we identify instances where analytic rigour has been compromised, we have a responsibility to correct the record,ā he added.
A senior CIA official, briefing reporters on condition of anonymity, said: āThereās absolutely no room for bias of any kind in CIAās work. So when we find that our tradecraft did not reach that high bar of impartiality, we must correct the record.ā
According to The Washington Post, the partially released reports examined the role of women in violent white nationalist groups overseas, the challenges facing LGBT activists in parts of the Islamic world, and the impact of the coronavirus pandemic on access to contraception and family planning in developing countries.
The senior official described one 2021 assessment as āa prime example of how CIA analysts should not be spending their timeā, arguing that it weighed in on foreign political debates ārather than discussing any actual threats of political violenceā and āimplies a danger to these societies from traditional motherhood-focused rolesā.
The official also said two reports relied on open-source information from advocacy groups, including the Human Rights Campaign, the Washington Blade newspaper and Planned Parenthood.
The CIA said the actions āunderscore our commitment to transparency, accountability, and objective intelligence analysisā.
The recall follows months of scrutiny by senior intelligence officials over how earlier assessments were prepared. The PIAB review was chaired by former Congressman Devin Nunes.
The CIA produces thousands of intelligence products annually.
(IANS)



