Posted on Thu, Jan. 25, 2007
Rockefeller: Cheney applied 'constant' pressure to stall
investigation on flawed Iraq intelligence
By Jonathan S. Landay
McClatchy Newspapers

Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-WV, chairman of the Senate Select
Committee on Intelligence, speaks to reporters.
* Cheney increasingly on the defensive
* Durbin calls Cheney 'delusional'
WASHINGTON - Vice President Dick Cheney exerted "constant"
pressure on the Republican former chairman of the Senate
Intelligence Committee to stall an investigation into the Bush
administration's use of flawed intelligence on Iraq, the panel's
Democratic chairman charged Thursday.

Transcript for April 10
Guests: Senate Intelligence Chairman Pat Roberts, R-KS and Vice
Chairman John Rockefeller, D-WV, former Senate Majority Leader
Bob Dole
In an interview with McClatchy Newspapers, Sen. Jay Rockefeller
of West Virginia also accused President Bush of running an
illegal program by ordering eavesdropping on Americans'
international e-mails and telephone communications without
court-issued warrants.
In the 45-minute interview, Rockefeller said that it was "not
hearsay" that Cheney, a leading proponent of invading Iraq,
pushed Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., to drag out the probe of the
administration's use of prewar intelligence.
"It was just constant," Rockefeller said of Cheney's alleged
interference. He added that he knew that the vice president
attended regular policy meetings in which he conveyed White
House directions to Republican staffers.
Republicans "just had to go along with the administration," he
said.
In an e-mail response to Rockefeller's comments, Cheney's
spokeswoman, Lea McBride, said: "The vice president believes
Senator Roberts was a good chairman of the Intelligence
Committee."
Roberts' chief of staff, Jackie Cottrell, blamed the Democrats
for the investigation remaining incomplete more than two years
after it began.
"Senator Rockefeller's allegations are patently untrue," she
said in an e-mail statement. "The delays came from the
Democrats' insistence that they expand the scope of the inquiry
to make it a more political document going into the 2006
elections. Chairman Roberts did everything he could to
accommodate their requests for further information without
allowing them to distort the facts."
"I'm not aware of any effort by the vice president, his staff or
anyone in the administration to influence the speed at which the
committee did its work," said Bill Duhnke, who was Roberts'
staff director.
Rockefeller's comments were among the most forceful he's made
about why the committee failed to complete the inquiry under
Roberts. Roberts chaired the intelligence committee from January
2003 until the Democrats took over Congress this month.
The panel released a report in July 2004 that lambasted the CIA
and other U.S. intelligence agencies for erroneously concluding
that Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein was concealing biological,
chemical and nuclear warfare programs. It then began examining
how senior Bush administration officials used faulty
intelligence to justify the March 2003 invasion.
Robert promised to quickly complete what became known as the
Phase II investigation. After more than two years, however, the
panel published only two of five Phase II reports amid serious
rifts between Republican and Democratic members and their
staffs.
Rockefeller recalled that in November 2005, the then-minority
Democrats employed a rarely used parliamentary procedure to
force the Senate into a closed session to pressure Roberts to
complete Phase II.
"That was the reason we closed the session. To force him" to
complete the investigation, he said.
The most potentially controversial of the three Phase II reports
being worked on will compare what Bush and his top lieutenants
said publicly about Iraq's weapons programs and ties to
terrorists with what was contained in top-secret intelligence
reports.
In the two reports released in September, the panel said that
the administration's claims of ties between Saddam and al-Qaida
were false and found that administration officials distributed
exaggerated and bogus claims provided by an Iraqi exile group
with close ties to some senior administration officials.
Rockefeller said it was important to complete the Phase II
inquiry.
"The looking backward creates tension, but it's necessary
tension because the administration needs to be held accountable
and the country . . . needs to know," he said.
Rockefeller said that he and the senior Republican member of the
committee, Sen. Christopher Bond, R-Mo., have put the frictions
behind them and agree that the committee should press the
administration for documents it's withholding on its domestic
eavesdropping program and detainee programs.
Under the eavesdropping program, the National Security Agency
monitored Americans' international telephone calls and e-mails
without court warrants if one party was a suspected member or
supporter of al-Qaida or another terrorist group.
Rockefeller charged that Bush had violated the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act, which requires the government to
obtain permission to eavesdrop on Americans from a secret
national security court.
"For five years he's (Bush) has been operating an illegal
program," he said, adding that the committee wants the
administration to provide the classified documents that set out
its legal argument that Bush has the power to wiretap Americans
without warrants.
Rockefeller is among a handful of lawmakers who were kept
briefed on the program after it started following the Sept. 11,
2001, attacks. But he told Cheney in a handwritten note in July
2003 that he was deeply concerned about its legality.
In the interview, Rockefeller said the committee needs more
details about how the program worked before it considers
amending the eavesdropping act to give the administration the
flexibility it says it requires to be able to track terrorists.
"How do we draw something up if we have no idea about what the
president sent out in the way of orders to the NSA? What about
the interpretation of the Department of Justice?" he asked.
"Americans . . . should want us to discern what the facts are,
what the truth is."
===============================
LEAK-GATE: The White House Scandal
GOOGLE: LEAKGATE >>
Leakgate Movie
http://www.apfn.org/APFN/leakgate_themovie1.htm
===============================
George Bush and Dick Cheney deliberately misled Congress and the
American public about Iraq in order to justify an illegal war.
Over 2400 American troops and tens of thousands of Iraqi
civilians have died as a result. This and other "high crimes and
misdemeanors" are grounds for impeachment.
http://www.impeachbush.tv/
LEAK - GATE: Page 1
This White House Scandal Finally Tips the Scale!
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Wilson, Plame, Cooper... Don't Forget the Back Story!
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 3 (9.30 MB) 10/11/05
http://www.apfn.org/audio/2005-10-11-Charles-03.mp3
US Senator John D. Rockefeller IV from West Virginia
Official site, including news about him, Senate activities,
issues, constituent services, press releases and statements,
biography, committees, ...
http://www.senate.gov/~rockefeller/
Sen. John Rockfeller
Washington, D.C.
531 Hart Senate Office Building
20510
(202) 224-6472
(202) 224-7665 Fax
AT PRESS CONFERENCE, SENATE INTELLIGENCE COMMITTEE VICE-CHAIRMAN
Rockefeller CALLS FOR THOROUGH, CREDIBLE, AND PROMPT PHASE II
REPORT
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