Claims by US President George W. Bush and other
top administration officials before the 2003 invasion of Iraq regarding Baghdad's
ties to al-Qaeda and its weapons of mass destruction (WMD) program were generally
not supported by the evidence that the US intelligence community had at the
time, according to a major new report by the Senate Intelligence Committee released
Thursday.
The long-awaited report, the last in a series published over the past several
years by the committee, found that Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney, in particular,
frequently made assertions in the run-up to the war that key intelligence agencies
could not substantiate or about which there was substantial disagreement within
the intelligence community.
"In making the case for war, the administration repeatedly presented intelligence
as fact when in reality it was unsubstantiated, contradicted, or even nonexistent,"
the Committee chairman, Sen. Jay Rockefeller, said on releasing the 172-page
report. "As a result, the American people were led to believe that the
threat from Iraq was much greater than actually existed."
"There is no question we all relied on flawed intelligence," he added.
"But, there is a fundamental difference between relying on incorrect intelligence
and deliberately painting a picture to the American people that you know is
not fully accurate."
The Committee also released a second report Thursday on a series of initially
secret meetings in Rome and Paris between neoconservative Pentagon officials
and alleged Iranian dissidents, including a notorious Iranian arms dealer, Manucher
Ghobanifar who played a key role in the so-called Iran-Contra affair of the
mid-1980s.
The report found that the meetings, which also included another Iran-Contra
player, Michael Ledeen of the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), were authorized
by then-Deputy National Security Advisor (currently National Security Adviser)
Stephen Hadley and Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz who, it concluded,
failed to keep relevant intelligence agencies and the State Department informed.
"The report found that the clandestine meetings...were inappropriate and
mishandled from beginning to end" and that "senior Defense Department
officials cut short internal investigations of the meetings..." after they
became known, a press release issued by the committee stated.
Both reports were signed by 10 members of the Committee, including two Republicans,
Sens. Olympia Snowe and Chuck Hagel. Five members -- all Republicans -- issued
a strong dissent, arguing that the minority had been "entirely cut out
of the process" and charging that the Democrats had "twisted policy
makers' statements and cherry-picked the intelligence in order to reach their
misleading conclusions." The ranking Republican on the committee, Sen.
Christopher "Kit" Bond, called the report "political theater."
The timing of the report's release, as well as its conclusions, however, is
likely to fuel the ongoing political debate over the Iraq war at a critical
moment in the presidential election campaign. This is particularly so with this
week's securing of the Democratic nomination by Sen. Barack Obama, whose outspoken
opposition to invading Iraq before the war is seen as a major reason for his
victory over Sen. Hillary Clinton, who voted in favor of the Congressional authorization
to go to war in the fall of 2002.
Obama now faces Republican Sen. John McCain, who, as honorary chairman of the
Committee to Liberate Iraq in the run-up to the invasion, not only endorsed
the claims that were being made by Bush and Cheney at the time, but also helped
to propagate them.
The new reports also tend to bolster the charges made in a new book by former
White House spokesman Scott McClellan, a longtime Bush aide who was considered
part of the president's inner circle during the same period.
"Bush and his advisers knew that the American people would almost certainly
not support a war launched primarily for the ambitious purpose of transforming
the Middle East," according to McClellan's memoir, 'What Happened: Inside
the Bush White House and Washington's Culture of Deception'.
"Over that summer of 2002, top Bush aides had outlined a strategy for
carefully orchestrating the coming campaign to aggressively sell the war"
in part through "innuendo and implication" and "intentional ignoring
of intelligence" that contradicted or cast doubt on their justifications
for going to war, McClellan wrote.
The book, which skyrocketed to the top of the bestseller list even before it
was officially released, has drawn considerable media attention over the last
two weeks.
The two new reports are the last to be issued by the Committee on the use of
intelligence by the administration before the war. Last year, the same Committee
issued a report on the administration's failure to heed warnings by the intelligence
community, including two major reports by the National Intelligence Council
(NIC), that an invasion of Iraq and its subsequent occupation would likely benefit
al-Qaeda, boost political Islam throughout the region, and give rise to possibly
violent conflict between various sectarian and ethnic groups within Iraq --
all conclusions that were downplayed or ignored by senior administration officials
at the time.
The latest report was focused on comparing statements made by top administration
officials, particularly Bush and Cheney, between August 2002 and the actual
invasion in March 2003 with intelligence reports that were available to them
at the time.
It found that the White House consistently exaggerated ties between al-Qaeda
and Iraq by repeatedly suggesting or outright asserting that the two forged
an operational relationship that included the provision of weapons training
and possibly WMD expertise. The report found that these allegations "were
not substantiated by the intelligence" at the time they were made.
The report also found that the intelligence also contradicted the White House's
assertions that Saddam Hussein "was prepared to give weapons of mass destruction
to terrorist groups for attack against the United States."
And it said that the intelligence community never confirmed the allegation,
made repeatedly by Cheney in particular, that one of the 9/11 organizers, Mohammed
Atta, met with a senior Iraqi intelligence official in Prague several months
before the attack.
"The president and his advisors undertook a relentless public campaign
in the aftermath of the (9/11) attacks to use the war against al-Qaeda as a
justification for overthrowing Saddam Hussein," Rockefeller said. "Representing
to the American people that the two had an operational partnership and posed
a single, indistinguishable threat was fundamentally misleading and led the
nation to war on false premises."
The intelligence community, according to the report, was also considerably
more skeptical about the state of Iraq's chemical weapons program and especially
its alleged nuclear weapons program than was indicated by top administration
officials at the time. Testimony by then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld that
the Iraqi government hid WMD in facilities buried deep underground did not reflect
any of the intelligence held by the intelligence community at the time.
(Inter Press Service)