Counterterrorism magazine published my Q&A with
CIA legend Ric Prado.
You can read the
interview via the below pages or the below text:
My Q&A with CIA
Legend Ric Prado
Enrique “Ric” Prado is a paramilitary, counterterrorism, and
special/clandestine operations specialist, with a focus on international
training operations and programs. He is a 24-year veteran of the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA), where he served as an Operations Officer in six
overseas posts. He was Deputy Chief of Station and “Plank Owner” of the
original Bin Ladin Task Force/Issues Station under Senior Analyst Michael
Scheuer, as well as Chief of Station in a hostile Muslim country. He also
served as Chief of Operations in the CIA’s Counterterrorist Center (CTC) during
the September 11th attacks, where he helped coordinate CIA/CTC’s special
operations (SPECOPS) activities with the National Security Council and FBI, as
well as with elite U.S. military representatives from Delta Force and SEAL-Team
Six, then detailed to CTC/CIA. He retired as Senior Intel Service-2 (SIS-2,
Major General equivalent at CIA).
Ric Prado spent his first ten
years at CIA as a paramilitary officer in Special Operations Group/Special
Activities Division (SOG/SAD, Ground Branch) which is CIA’s “special operations
force.” His service included 36 months in Central America jungles as the first
CIA officer living in the anti-Sandinista “Contra” camps. Subsequently running
counterterrorism/insurgency operations in Peru and in the Philippines. Other
key positions included head of the CIA’s Korean Operations and Chief of CIA
Liaison in Seoul, ROK. He is fluent in his native Spanish and once held a 2+
level in Japanese.
His military training and
qualifications include Airborne, SCUBA, Advance Combat Medical Rescue,
S.E.R.E., Mountain Climbing, and Jungle Survival under the auspices of the US Air
Force elite Pararescue Teams (1971-1976). CIA training included: Ops/Case
Officer certification training (The Farm), Counterterrorist Operations,
Advanced Tradecraft Course, Free-Fall parachuting, Draeger close-circuit
(Combat Diver’s 1984 and SEALS 2003), Korean Ops, and numerous CT driving and
weapons-related courses. Ric Prado is also a graduate of the elite Henk
Iverson’s Lone Operator course (2018).
Ric Prado retired from the CIA
in 2004. He is now co-owner of Camp X, Special Operations Lone Operator
Training Group and continues his service training and supporting the “SPECOPS”
Community as Subject Matter Expert (SME) at the SWCS’ ASOT (Advanced Special
Operations and Techniques) and ASOT Managers Course, Dragon Warrior, Emerald
Warrior, among others.
Ric Prado is the author of
“Black Ops: The Life of a CIA Shadow Warrior.”
He was interviewed by Paul
Davis.
IACSP : I enjoyed reading “Black Ops.” I found it most
interesting. Why did you write the book?
Prado : I never thought of being an
author, much less a best-selling author. As you know, the book made the New
York Times Best Seller list at number seven. I kind of grew weary of the
reputation that my agency has, mostly in Hollywood and in most novels. The CIA
is the most maligned and misunderstood federal agency in the U.S. Government.
My colleagues are always described as immoral and corrupt, and as maniacal assassins
like the fictional character Jason Borne. We have 137 stars (representing the
death of CIA personnel in the line of duty) on the Wall of Honor at the agency,
and we are a small organization compared to the Army the Navy and the Air
Force. Some of these people I personally knew. It kind of bothered me that
their grandchildren will learn about the agency and their grandpas, not to
mention my own grandson, primarily from Hollywood. That was the primary reason
I wrote the book. To try to put a realistic spin not only on the kind of
operations that we do, but on the kind of people that we have in our ranks.
Patriots. People who have dedicated their lives, mostly anonymous, to this
country. The second part is communism. I am Cuban born. I lived under communism
and my wife lived under communism. We saw what communism did to our first
country. So I wanted to write a book about my efforts to counter and fight
communism in my different incarnations.
IACSP : For many Americans, the CIA appears to be
unapproachable and unknowing. This can lead to misconceptions. As you noted,
most people only know about the CIA from spy thrillers. When I was in the Navy
and later as a Defense Department civilian employee doing security work, I
received CIA training and regular briefings, and as a writer, I’ve interviewed
a good number of CIA officers here for the Journal. The CIA officers I’ve known
are dedicated government employees serving America. Books like yours, it seems
to me, can go a long way to counter misconceptions.
Prado : When I do public speaking, one
of the questions I always ask is to name me two movies that represents the CIA
in a positive way. There is always one person who will say Jason Borne, and
then I’ll say, a maniacal assassin with 17 personalities who is being hunted
down by the CIA is a good movie about the CIA?
IACSP : There are terrorist organizations, transnational
criminal organizations, and rogue nations, and the Jason Borne movies choose to
make the CIA the bad guy. Silly. I thought Tom Clancy’s novels were fairly
realistic, would you agree?
Prado : Tom Clancy’s books were always
very realistic. I have several of his books and “Without Remorse” is one of my
favorite novels.
IACSP : One of my favorites as well. Did you see the poor
film adaptation?”
Prado: It was awful.
IACSP : Do you think Cuba will ever be free of communism
now that Fidel Castro, the bastard, is dead?
Prado : We have one more bastard
Castro, which is Raul. He is retired, but he is still the power. I honestly
believe if we play our cards right in this country, we can entice change in
Cuba. Stick and carrot. Sanctions, sanctions, sanctions. If you do this, we’ll
do that. I want to go back to Cuba and visit my grandfather’s grave, their
house. That is one of my dreams.
IACSP : Many people, even today, view the Contras as gun
and drug traffickers and brutal thugs. You offer a different view in your book,
although you encountered some bad apples. How would you describe the Contras?
Prado : Of all my assignments, I would
put my Contra experience as number one for three reasons. The first reason is
as a Cuban kid, fresh off the banana boat, working for CIA and now I’m the only
man allowed to be at the camps training these folks. Striking back at the very
same animal that destroyed my family in my first country. There was a visceral
satisfaction of the operations we did. It became politized at home, but the
greater majority of the Contras had personal reasons for joining, as they
explained to me at campfires – they burned my church down, they kicked out my
priest, they raped my daughter, they conscripted my underage son. It was all
personal. When I was in front of Congress later on, I was able to voice those
opinions and observations. The Contras were a class act of people and I’m still
in touch with two or three of them.
IACSP : You also write about your time in the Philippines
from 1990 to 1992. I was a frequent visitor to the Philippine during the
Vietnam War when I served on an aircraft carrier. The Philippines has a dual
threat in the communist New People’s Army (NPA) and the Islamic terrorist
organizations, yet one does not read or hear much those threats.
Prado : They are two different
animals, but similar in their destructive capabilities. When I was there, the
NPA was in Manila and all the major cities, and we were providing incredible
training to the Filipinos. I worked with the Philippine Constabulary, the Navy
and the Army. I love the Philippines. They are warm, loving people until it is
time to fight, and they are pretty good at it. I respect that. When I was
there, they were on the brink of losing to the NPA. The Islamic terrorist group
Abu Sayyaf down south was just coming up and they have gotten more radical.
They are really just a bunch of bandits. We did a lot of damage to the NPA and
also to Abu Sayyaf, because we had all kinds of maritime platforms that we gave
the Navy to cover 7,000 islands. I was the liaison guy. Going to all these
places once a week, I was meeting with commanders, offering training, getting
the intelligence, and noting what they needed. It was very rewarding.
IACSP : You later worked in the CIA’s Counterterrorism
Center (CTC). Can you give us an overview of the CTC prior to and after 9/11?
Prado : The Counterterrorist Center
was started by Dewey Claridge, one of my mentors, in 1986. He was bigger than
life. I loved him until the day he died. My first CT assignment was to a Latin
American country that I cannot mention, in 1998, two years after the center
started. I recruited a terrorist, and I did all kind of stuff. The CTC was
small back then, 50-60 people. It kept growing as the need kept growing. I came
back in 1995 when they asked me to open up the bin Laden task force, “Alec
Station.” I was the deputy chief of station working the bin Laden account and
the chief was Michael Scheuer, an analyst. I went back as the chief of
operations in May of 2001. The 9/11 attack happened was shortly thereafter.
IACSP : Your account in the book of the CIA officers
working around the clock during the attack and post-attack was very
interesting. I was stationed at a naval base in Philadelphia on 9/11, and we
didn’t know if and where there would be another attack after the Twin Towers
and the Pentagon. I recall that it was a harrowing time. Certainly, the CIA was
a possible target.
Prado: The CIA was evacuated, but
most of the folks at the CTC stayed behind. I slept in my office for the first
three days. So did dozens and dozens of my colleagues. After being the chief of
operations, I came back with a very robust program, and I briefed Vice
President Dick Cheney and Condoleezza Rice. It was approved, but we were never
allowed to deploy. We were hearing all this chatter going on before 9/11. We
knew it was al Qaeda and we were seeing their communications diminish and we
were seeing people that we had under surveillance disappear. These were all
clues that they were planning something big. I told CIA Director Tenet that if
I had this program a year before 9/11, I would have gone out and neutralized
three different al Qaeda senior support guys. That would be put the brakes on
everything because they would have thought they were penetrated. That was the
whole concept of the program. When I saw the program wasn’t going to ever
really sail, I decided to retire on an operational high note. I spent the last
three years in the CIA leading some of the best people I ever worked with,
snooping and pooping all over the world, which not too many SIS-2 level guys
get to do. Operationally, that was my high. If they weren’t willing to let me
do what I do best, which was even approved by the White House, then to hell
with it. Maybe it’s time for me to do something else, and I did.
IACSP: The Russian invasion of Ukraine is dominating the
news now. You’ve said that the U.S. could do more to help the Ukrainians. What
more can be done?
Prado : I think the world needs to do
more to help the Ukrainians, not just the United States. Global security should
be a team sport. The UN is pretty feckless. What amazes me is that we were “surprised,”
quote unquote, that Putin invaded Ukraine. As soon as he took power, he said I
am going to reconstitute the Soviet Union. He did two invasions before this
one. I was really shocked that no one saw this coming. That’s what communism
is. That’s what they did in Cuba, Vietnam and Venezuela. As far as helping the
Ukrainians, my belief is that we were helping them for several years before
this crisis. We were preparing them militarily, preparing them for stay-behind
operations, preparing them for guerilla operations, and training them on the
conventional use of missiles and other weapons. The Ukrainians have proven to
be incredible fighters, but we should have opened up every warehouse we have
with tanks, planes and missiles and ask our allies to do the same. The other
thing is to shut down every nickel that goes to Russia. Instead of gradually
choking, choking and choking, break their neck, without having to fight them
directly.
IACSP : I like to think that our support of Ukraine is a
bit of payback for the Soviet support of the Communist North Vietnamese and
Viet Cong during the Vietnam War.
Prado : I hope that people read my
book, because I honestly believe it will help people understand what the most
secretive but capable agency does, how well it does it, and the patriotic ethos
of the people that we have in our ranks.
IACSP : Thank you for speaking to us and thank you for
your service.
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