Woolsey has held important positions in both
Democratic and
Republican administrations. His influence has been felt during the administrations of
Jimmy Carter,
Ronald Reagan,
George H. W. Bush, and
Bill Clinton. He has also worked at the
Shea & Gardner law firm, as Associate (1973–1977) and partner (1979–1989, 1991–1993). Woolsey has served in the
U.S. government as: • Advisor (during military service) on the U.S. Delegation to the
Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT 1),
Helsinki and
Vienna, 1969–1970 • General Counsel to the
U.S. Senate Committee on Armed Services, 1970–1973 •
Under Secretary of the Navy, 1977–1979 • Delegate at Large to the U.S.-
Soviet Strategic Arms Reduction Talks (START) and Nuclear and Space Arms Talks (NST),
Geneva, 1983–1986 •
Ambassador to the
Negotiation on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe (CFE),
Vienna, 1989–1991 •
Director of CIA, 1993–1995
CIA Director and Jeanne de Clarens, field officer, source of scientific intelligence, captured by the Nazis, in 1993
Relationship with Bill Clinton As Director of the CIA, Woolsey had limited access to President
Bill Clinton. According to journalist
Richard Miniter: Never once in his two-year tenure did CIA director James Woolsey ever have a one-on-one meeting with Clinton. Even semi-private meetings were rare. They only happened twice. Woolsey told me: "It wasn't that I had a bad relationship with the president. It just didn't exist." Another quote about his relationship with Clinton, according to Paula Kaufman of
Insight on the News: Remember
the guy who in 1994 crashed his plane onto the White House lawn? That was me trying to get an appointment to see President Clinton.
David Halberstam notes in
War in a Time of Peace that Clinton chose Woolsey for CIA director because the Clinton campaign had courted
neoconservatives leading up to the 1992 election, promising to assist democratic
Taiwan,
Bosnia in
Bosnian War, and be tougher on
human rights violations in China, and it was decided that they ought to give at least one neoconservative a job in the administration.
Aldrich Ames Woolsey was CIA director when
Aldrich Ames was arrested, on February 21, 1994, for treason and spying against the United States. The CIA was criticized for not focusing on Ames sooner, given the obvious increase in Ames' standard of living; and there was a "huge uproar" in Congress when Woolsey decided that no one in the CIA would be dismissed or demoted at the agency. Woolsey declared: "Some have clamored for heads to roll in order that we could say that heads have rolled ... Sorry, that's not my way." Woolsey abruptly resigned on December 28, 1994.
Later career Woolsey joined the board of directors for The Arlington Institute in 1992. He is currently a member of the
Washington Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP) Board of Advisors, Advisor of the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security, co-founder of the United States Energy Security Council, Founding Member of the
Set America Free Coalition, and a senior vice president at
Booz Allen Hamilton for Global Strategic Security (since July 15, 2002). He is a Patron of the
Henry Jackson Society, a British think tank. Woolsey has had long-standing contact with Central and Eastern Europe and as a Member of the Board of Advisors for America of the Global Panel Foundation based in
Berlin,
Copenhagen,
Prague,
Sydney, and
Toronto. He was formerly chairman of the
Freedom House board of trustees. He is a member of the International Advisory Board of
NGO Monitor. Woolsey is a member of the
Project for the New American Century and was one of the signatories to the January 26, 1998, letter sent to President Clinton that called for the removal of
Saddam Hussein. That same year he served on the
Rumsfeld Commission, which investigated the threat of
ballistic missiles for the U.S. Congress. Woolsey previously served as chairman of the
Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a nonprofit, nonpartisan D.C.-based research institute that focuses on foreign policy and national security. In 2008, Woolsey joined
VantagePoint Venture Partners as a venture partner. in 2012
John McCain hired Woolsey as an advisor on energy and climate change issues for his
2008 U.S. presidential election campaign. In April 2011,
Lux Capital announced that Woolsey would become a venture partner in the firm. In July 2011, Woolsey, in cooperation with
Robert McFarlane, co-founded the United States Energy Security Council. Woolsey currently sits on the board of advisors for the
Fuel Freedom Foundation. He received an honorary doctorate from the
Institute of World Politics in
Washington, DC in 2011. Woolsey was a board member and vice-chairman of
The Jamestown Foundation, and sits on the advisory board for nonprofit
America Abroad Media. Woolsey currently sits on the Strategic Advisory Board for
Genie Energy with
Dick Cheney,
Rupert Murdoch, and Lord
Jacob Rothschild. Genie is known for discovering a "massive" oil strata in Syria's Golan Heights near Israel. He formerly served as Chancellor at
The Institute of World Politics and the independent non-executive director of
Imperial Pacific. Woolsey joined as a senior adviser to Republican presidential candidate
Donald Trump in September 2016. He resigned on January 5 amid Congressional hearings into
cyber attacks and public statements by Donald Trump critical of the
United States Intelligence Community. On October 27, 2017, Woolsey's spokesman told
NBC News that Woolsey has cooperated with the investigations of the
FBI and that of
Special Counsel Robert Mueller into a meeting that then-
Donald Trump campaign advisor
Michael Flynn held in September 2016. Woolsey alleges that, during the meeting, Flynn offered to help officials of
Turkish government return Turkish dissident
Fethullah Gülen to
Turkey. In April 2021, Woolsey was officially banned from entering Russia with the counter sanction set by the Russian government in response to sanctions under the Biden administration. He also accused the Soviet Union of being responsible for the
Assassination of
US President John F. Kennedy in a book published in 2021. According to James Woolsey and
Ion Mihai Pacepa in their 2021 book ''Operation Dragon: Inside the Kremlin's Secret War on America'', both
Lee Harvey Oswald and his wife
Marina Oswald Porter are Soviet agents. On July 15, 2023, the
Washington Post published an article the Justice Department unsealed its indictment of
Gal Luft, a dual Israeli and American citizen who ran a Maryland think tank. The indictment describes what it casts as an effort by Luft and a Chinese oil company representative to “recruit” a “former senior U.S. government official” and get him installed in a position of power in
Trump’s orbit, even before his election. The Chinese business executive and the former senior U.S. government official aren’t named in the indictment, but the context indicates they are
Patrick Ho (identified as “CC-1”) and former CIA director James Woolsey (identified as “Individual-1”), respectively. ==Views==