WMD
Commission releases Scathing Report
WMD Commission Releases Scathing Report
Posted Mar 31, 2005 04:39 PM PST
Category: COVER-UP/DECEPTIONS
"We accept the responsibility, but none of the blame!"
http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/
WMD Data Flawed, Lacking, Panel Says
Intelligence Commission Outlines 74 Fixes for Bureaucracy
By Walter Pincus and Peter Baker
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, April 1, 2005; Page A01
SOURCE:
U.S. intelligence agencies were "dead wrong" in their prewar assessments of
Iraq's nuclear, biological and chemical weapons and today know "disturbingly
little" about the capabilities and intentions of other potential adversaries
such as Iran and North Korea, a presidential commission reported yesterday.
While praising intelligence successes in Libya and Pakistan, the
commission's report offered a withering critique of the government's
collection of information leading to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, calling its
data "either worthless or misleading" and its analysis "riddled with
errors," resulting in one of the "most damaging intelligence failures in
recent American history."
The 692-page report to President Bush determined that many of the problems
that led to the Iraq breakdown have not been fixed and warned that they may
be undercutting the quality of current U.S. evaluations of Iranian and North
Korean nuclear weapons development. To avoid a repeat performance, the
commission produced a set of 74 recommendations intended to "transform" a
sprawling intelligence bureaucracy that it described as "fragmented, loosely
managed and poorly coordinated."
The report presented the most extensive examination to date of how the
United States came to believe that Saddam Hussein was harboring secret
weapons of mass destruction, leading to a war that toppled a dictator but
turned up no such weapons. The report depicted an intelligence apparatus
plagued by turf battles, wedded to old assumptions and mired in
unimaginative thinking.
Yet while unstinting in its appraisal of intelligence agencies, the panel
that Bush appointed under pressure in February 2004 said it was "not
authorized" to explore the question of how the commander in chief used the
faulty information to make perhaps the most critical decision of his
presidency. As he accepted the report yesterday, Bush offered no thoughts
about relying on flawed intelligence to launch a war and took no questions
from reporters.
Instead, he focused on the proposals to further revamp the intelligence
agencies following their post-Sept. 11 reorganization. "The central
conclusion is one that I share," Bush said, flanked by the commission
co-chairmen, retired judge Laurence H. Silberman and former senator Charles
S. Robb (D-Va.). "America's intelligence community needs fundamental change
to enable us to successfully confront the threats of the 21st century."
Bush ordered White House homeland security adviser Frances Fragos Townsend
to cull through the recommendations, most of which could be enacted by
executive action, and she directed Cabinet secretaries to report back to her
quickly. "You will begin to see action in a matter of weeks," Townsend said.
Some Democrats complained that the commission effectively ducked the central
issue of how Bush decided to go to war in Iraq to eliminate weapons that
were not there. Senate Minority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) said the
report "fails to review an equally important aspect of our national security
policymaking process -- how policymakers use the intelligence they are
provided."
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) was even sharper. "The
president's decision to go to war in Iraq was also dead wrong," she said,
adding, "The investigation will not be complete unless we know how the Bush
administration may have used or misused intelligence to pursue its own
agenda."
But former CIA director George J. Tenet, who reportedly once told Bush that
the Iraq weapons intelligence was a "slam dunk," said the report was too
harsh on his old agency. "I wish the commission had spent more time
reflecting on how far the intelligence community has come in rebuilding
American intelligence," he said.
The nine-member panel, officially called the Commission on the Intelligence
Capabilities of the United States Regarding Weapons of Mass Destruction,
blamed intelligence agencies for overselling their knowledge and not
disclosing conflicting information to policymakers. At the same time, it
exonerated Bush and Vice President Cheney from allegations of pressuring
analysts to conclude that Iraq was developing weapons of mass destruction.
"The analysts who worked Iraqi weapons issues universally agreed that in no
instance did political pressure cause them to skew or alter any of their
analytical judgments," the commission said. "That said, it is hard to deny
the conclusion that intelligence analysts worked in an environment that did
not encourage skepticism about the conventional wisdom."
In fact, the commission concluded that policymakers should in the future
challenge analysts harder to justify their conclusions, even at the risk of
being accused of politicizing intelligence. "It's very important for
policymakers to question and push hard on the intelligence community to
explore and to fill gaps," Silberman said.
The panel's report became the latest to document the Iraq intelligence
failures and offered details never disclosed in previous reports. It
revealed, for example, that the National Security Agency, the organization
that intercepts electronic signals, was effectively shut out of Iraq and
lost access to "important aspects of Iraqi communications."
WMD Data Flawed, Lacking, Panel Says
And it described how the CIA failed to tell Secretary of State Colin L.
Powell before his showdown presentation to the U.N. Security Council in
February 2003 that a key allegation was provided by a single Iraqi source
nicknamed "Curveball" whose credibility had been undercut. The analysts who
helped prepare Powell's speech were unaware that, as the report puts it,
Curveball was "lying."
The report expressed particular concern that the nation's intelligence
agencies were not adequately focusing on biological weapons. It said U.S.
forces in Afghanistan discovered that al Qaeda's bioweapons research was
"further along" than U.S. intelligence had known, particularly involving a
pathogen the commission referred to only as "Agent X."
"The program was extensive, well-organized, and operated for two years
before September 11" at sites containing commercial equipment and run by
"individuals with special training," the report noted. Based on what they
found in Afghanistan, U.S. intelligence theorized that al Qaeda "had
acquired several biological agents possibly as early as 1999, and had the
necessary equipment to enable limited, basic production of Agent X."
Bioweapons specialists said Agent X most likely referred to a strain of
anthrax. U.S. officials have previously said that al Qaeda conducted
research on anthrax at an Afghan facility called Tarnak Farm, some of it by
Yazid Sufaat, a Malaysian bioscientist trained in California and now in
detention in Malaysia.
The commission expressed misgivings that intelligence agencies may still be
misjudging situations in North Korea and Iran, however the section of the
report dealing with those countries remained classified.
"The bad news is that we still know disturbingly little about the weapons
programs and even less about the intentions of many of our most dangerous
adversaries," the panel said in a cover letter to Bush.
For all of the technical challenges facing the intelligence community, the
commission linked its overall problem to management. "They're still in some
respects fighting the last war," said Robb, referring to the Cold War. "The
enemy has changed dramatically."
The panel proposed empowering the new director of national intelligence, a
position created by legislation last year, to better integrate the
collection efforts of the government's 15 intelligence agencies at the CIA,
Pentagon, State Department, Energy Department and FBI. But at the same time
it urged that analysts remain diversified at those agencies so they can
carry on what the commission hopes will be a more lively debate about
interpretations.
The panel suggested a variety of reorganizations, including the creation of
a new Human Intelligence Directorate within the CIA to oversee increased
overseas spying by the agency's Directorate of Operations as well as the
Pentagon and FBI. It also proposed merging the FBI's counterintelligence and
counterterrorism divisions with its new intelligence division into a new
National Security Service within the bureau. The new service would report to
both the FBI director and the new national intelligence director.
The report suggested several other new institutions as well, including a
National Counter Proliferation Center to coordinate the fight against
weapons of mass destruction; a National Intelligence University to enhance
tradecraft training; a new long-term analysis unit to escape the pressures
of day-to-day intelligence collection; an Open Source Directorate to focus
on finding publicly available information, particularly on the Internet; and
a nonprofit research institute outside the intelligence community to
encourage dissenting views.
The panel also recommended changes to the intelligence reports Bush gets
known as the presidential daily briefing. Leading up to the Iraq war, the
panel found, the presidential briefings were "disastrously one-sided" and
"more alarmist and less nuanced" than longer studies, such as the National
Intelligence Estimates. The daily briefings never cast doubt on prior
information provided to Bush and thus "seemed to be 'selling' intelligence
in order to keep its customers, or at least the First Customer, interested."
The panel called for toning down headlines in the presidential briefings and
limiting their content to intelligence that "requires high-level attention."
It also recommended that the new intelligence director, John D. Negroponte,
who is awaiting Senate confirmation, oversee the production of the briefings
but not prepare them or even go the White House each morning to present them
because it would consume too much of his time.
Staff writers Charles Babington and John Mintz contributed to this report.
===========
We accept the responsibility, but none of the blame!"
FLASHBACK: CIA official 'sacked over WMD'
A sacked CIA official is suing the agency for allegedly retaliating against
him for refusing to falsify his reports on Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction to support the White House's pre-war position, The Washington
Post said on Thursday.
Posted Mar 31, 2005 04:11 PM PST
Category: COVER-UP/DECEPTIONS
Relinked in light of today's pathetic attempt to dump the blame for Bush's
lies on the CIA.
FLASHBACK: Bush bullied CIA in order to dupe us
Pressure was exerted in private, including visits by Cheney to cross-examine
analysts at CIA headquarters. It took place in public, as well, as
mouthpieces in the conservative press attacked the CIA as Saddam-loving
apologists. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld even created a whole new
intelligence office to reinterpret evidence "overlooked" by the fools at
CIA.
Posted Mar 31, 2005 04:07 PM PST
Category: COVER-UP/DECEPTIONS
Relinked in light of today's pathetic attempt to dump the blame for Bush's
lies on the CIA.
FLASHBACK: No WMDs in Iraq, says CIA
Posted Mar 31, 2005 04:04 PM PST
Category: COVER-UP/DECEPTIONS
Re-linked in light of today's pathetic effort to dump the blame for Bush's
lies on the CIA.
http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/
Main Page -
Friday, 04/01/05
Message Board by American
Patriot Friends Network [APFN]
APFN MESSAGEBOARD
ARCHIVES
