SMOKING GUN....The lie about going to war in Iraq!!!

A former top CIA official
04/23/06 60 Minutes re: Intelligence on the Iraq War
Quote
"The policy was set. The war in Iraq was coming and they
were looking for intelligence to fit into the policy."
(5.09MB) 22Min 14Sec
http://www.apfn.net/pogo/M002I060423182100-60MINUTES-Iraq-War.MP3
A Spy Speaks Out
When no weapons of mass destruction surfaced in Iraq,
President Bush insisted WMD claims were the result of faulty
intelligence. A former top CIA official tells CBS the White
House only used intelligence it liked, ignoring other
information. More...
http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/60minutes/main3415.shtml
When no weapons of mass destruction surfaced in Iraq,
President Bush insisted WMD claims were the result of faulty
intelligence. A former top CIA official tells CBS the White
House only used intelligence it liked, ignoring other
information. More...
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/04/21/60minutes/main1527749.shtml
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LEAK - GATE: This White House Scandal Finally Tips the
Scale!
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/leakgate.htm
Libby: Bush Authorized Leak To Times
4/06/06 Randi Rhodes: Bush leaking classified information to
the press to get his Iraq War
#1
http://www.apfn.net/audio/A003I06040612021901480-rhodes-leak1.MP3
(4.07MB)
#2
http://www.apfn.net/audio/A004I06040612321801480-rhodes-leak2.MP3
(3.67MB)
4/06/06 Randi Rhodes re: Leakgate
http://www.apfn.net/audio/M001I060406130730-leakgate1.MP3
(4.01MB)
http://www.apfn.net/audio/M002I060406135053-leakgate2.MP3
(3.79MB)
http://www.apfn.net/audio/M003I060406143202-leakgate3.MP3
(3.81MB)
4/06/06 Al Franken re: Leakgate
#1
http://www.apfn.net/audio/A001I06040609055201480-franken-leakgate2.MP3
(4.54MB)
#2
http://www.apfn.net/audio/A002I06040610124801480-franken-leakgate2.MP3
(7.17MB)
Leak-Gate Part 1: The Lies
Flash Player
http://www.apfn.org/flash/leakgate1.swf
Leak-Gate Part 2: The Leak
Flash Player
http://www.apfn.org/flash/leakgate2.swf
Leak-Gate Part 3: ‘more leaks, call the plumber'
Flash Player
http://www.apfn.org/flash/leakgate3.swf
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/Bush_leak.htm
4/07/06 Hardball with Chris Matthews re: Leakgate - Bush
authorized exposure of classified information.
#1
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L001I060407162615-matthews-leakgate1.MP3
(6.21MB) 27Min 10 Sec
#2
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L002I060407165455-matthews-leakgate2.MP3
(6.35MB) 27Min 46Sec
4/07/06 Randi Rhodes re: Leakgate - Bush authorized
classified information leak
#1
http://www.apfn.net/audio/A002I06040713454001480-rhodes-leakgateA.MP3
(3.81MB) 16Min 39 Sec
#2
http://www.apfn.net/audio/A003I06040713454001480-rhodes-leakgateB.MP3
(4.95MB) 21Min 37 Sec
Charles Goyett: Wilson, Plame, Cooper... Don't Forget the
Back Story!
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 3 (9.30 MB) 10/11/05
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-11-Charles-03.mp3
4/10/06 CNN Wolf Blitzer Situation Room with Joseph Wilson
re: Leakgate
http://www.apfn.net/audio/M001I060410155242-CNN-wilson-4-10-06.MP3
(4.55MB)
A Spy Speaks Out
When no weapons of mass destruction surfaced in Iraq,
President Bush insisted WMD claims were the result of faulty
intelligence. A former top CIA official tells CBS the White
House only used intelligence it liked, ignoring other
information. More...
http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/60minutes/main3415.shtml
04/23/06 CBS 60 Minutes re: Intelligence on the Iraq War
http://www.apfn.net/pogo/M002I060423182100-60MINUTES-Iraq-War.MP3
(5.09MB) 22Min 14Sec
(CBS) When no weapons of mass destruction surfaced in Iraq,
President Bush insisted that all those WMD claims before the
war were the result of faulty intelligence. But a former top
CIA official, Tyler Drumheller — a 26-year veteran of the
agency — has decided to do something CIA officials at his
level almost never do: Speak out.
He tells correspondent Ed Bradley the real failure was not
in the intelligence community but in the White House. He
says he saw how the Bush administration, time and again,
welcomed intelligence that fit the president's determination
to go to war and turned a blind eye to intelligence that did
not.
"It just sticks in my craw every time I hear them say it’s
an intelligence failure. It’s an intelligence failure. This
was a policy failure," Drumheller tells Bradley.
Drumheller was the CIA's top man in Europe, the head of
covert operations there, until he retired a year ago. He
says he saw firsthand how the White House promoted
intelligence it liked and ignored intelligence it didn’t:
"The idea of going after Iraq was U.S. policy. It was going
to happen one way or the other," says Drumheller.
Drumheller says he doesn't think it mattered very much to
the administration what the intelligence community had to
say. "I think it mattered it if verified. This basic belief
that had taken hold in the U.S. government that now is the
time, we had the means, all we needed was the will," he
says.
The road to war in Iraq took some strange turns — none
stranger than a detour to the West African country of Niger.
In late 2001, a month after 9/11, the United States got a
report from the Italian intelligence service that Saddam
Hussein had bought 500 tons of so-called yellowcake uranium
in order to build a nuclear bomb.
But Drumheller says many CIA analysts were skeptical. "Most
people came to the opinion that there was something
questionable about it," he says.
Asked if that was his reaction, Drumheller says, "That was
our reaction from the very beginning. The report didn't hold
together."
Drumheller says that was the "general feeling" in the agency
at that time.
However, Vice President Dick Cheney thought the story was
worth investigating, and asked the CIA not to discount the
story without first taking a closer look. So, in February
2002, the agency sent former ambassador Joseph Wilson to
Niger to investigate.
"If Saddam Hussein had acquired 500 tons of yellowcake
uranium in violation of U.N. sanctions, that would be pretty
serious, wouldn’t it?" Bradley asked Wilson.
"Absolutely. Certainly. And the fact that there was an
allegation out there that he was even attempting to purchase
500 tons of uranium was very serious, because it essentially
meant that they were restarting their nuclear programs,"
Wilson replied.
Wilson spent eight days in Niger looking for signs of a
secret deal to send yellowcake to Iraq. He spoke to
government officials who would have known about such a
transaction. No one did. There had been a meeting between
Iraqis and Nigerians in 1999, but Wilson was told uranium
had never been discussed. He also found no evidence that
Iraq had even been interested in buying uranium.
"I concluded that it could not have happened," Wilson says.
At the end of his eight-day stay in Niger, Wilson says he
had no lingering doubts.
When he returned, Wilson told the CIA what he had learned.
Despite that, some intelligence analysts stood by the
Italian report that Saddam Hussein had purchased uranium
from Niger. But the director of the CIA and the deputy
director didn’t buy it. In October, when the president’s
speechwriters tried to put the Niger uranium story in a
speech that President Bush was scheduled to deliver in
Cincinnati, they intervened.
In a phone call and two faxes to the White House, they
warned “the Africa story is overblown” and “the evidence is
weak.” The speechwriters took the uranium reference out of
the speech.
Meanwhile, the CIA had made a major intelligence
breakthrough on Iraq’s nuclear program. Naji Sabri, Iraq’s
foreign minister, had made a deal to reveal Iraq’s military
secrets to the CIA. Drumheller was in charge of the
operation.
"This was a very high inner circle of Saddam Hussein.
Someone who would know what he was talking about,"
Drumheller says.
"You knew you could trust this guy?" Bradley asked.
"We continued to validate him the whole way through,"
Drumheller replied.
According to Drumheller, CIA Director George Tenet delivered
the news about the Iraqi foreign minister at a high-level
meeting at the White House, including the president, the
vice president and Secretary of State Rice.
At that meeting, Drumheller says, "They were enthusiastic
because they said, they were excited that we had a
high-level penetration of Iraqis."
What did this high-level source tell him?
"He told us that they had no active weapons of mass
destruction program," says Drumheller.
"So in the fall of 2002, before going to war, we had it on
good authority from a source within Saddam's inner circle
that he didn't have an active program for weapons of mass
destruction?" Bradley asked.
"Yes," Drumheller replied. He says there was doubt in his
mind at all.
"It directly contradicts, though, what the president and his
staff were telling us," Bradley remarked.
"The policy was set," Drumheller says. "The war in Iraq was
coming. And they were looking for intelligence to fit into
the policy, to justify the policy."
Drumheller expected the White House to ask for more
information from the Iraqi foreign minister.
But he says he was taken aback by what happened. "The group
that was dealing with preparation for the Iraq war came back
and said they're no longer interested," Drumheller recalls.
"And we said, 'Well, what about the intel?' And they said,
'Well, this isn't about intel anymore. This is about regime
change.'"
"And if I understand you correctly, when the White House
learned that you had this source from the inner circle of
Saddam Hussein, they were thrilled with that," Bradley
asked.
"The first we heard, they were. Yes," Drumheller replied.
Once they learned what it was the source had to say — that
Saddam Hussein did not have the capability to wage nuclear
war or have an active WMD program, Drumheller says, "They
stopped being interested in the intelligence."
The White House declined to respond to Drumheller's account
of Naji Sabri’s role, but Secretary of State Rice has said
that Sabri, the Iraqi foreign minister turned U.S. spy, was
just one source, and therefore his information wasn’t
reliable.
"They certainly took information that came from single
sources on uranium, on the yellowcake story and on several
other stories with no corroboration at all and so you can’t
say you only listen to one source, because on many issues
they only listened to one source," says Drumheller.
"So you’re saying that if there was a single source and that
information from that source backed up the case they were
trying to build, then that single source was ok, but if it
didn’t, then the single source was not ok, because he
couldn’t be corroborated," Bradley asked.
"Unfortunately, that’s what it looks like," Drumheller
replied.
"One panel after another found that agencies were giving
conflicting information to the president," Bradley remarked.
Drumheller admits they were. "And that's the problem. No.
There was no one voice in coming out of the intelligence
community and that allowed those people to pick and choose
those bits of information that fit what they wanted to
know."
A few weeks after Sabri told the CIA that Iraq had no active
nuclear program, the Niger uranium story seemed to get a new
life: Documents that supposedly could prove that Saddam had
purchased uranium from Africa suddenly surfaced in Rome. The
documents came from Rocco Martino, a former spy for Italian
military intelligence.
For years, Martino operated in a shady intelligence
underworld, buying government secrets and then selling them
to the highest bidder. Martino told CBS News that a colonel
in Italian military intelligence arranged for him to buy
classified documents from a woman who worked in the embassy
of Niger. One set of documents showed Iraq had purchased
uranium from Niger.
What did he think when he first looked at the documents?
"I thought I had my hands on some important papers. And this
same woman was telling me that they were very important,"
says Martino.
In October 2002, Martino tried to sell the documents to
Elisabeta Burba, a reporter for an Italian news magazine.
She had purchased information from him in the past.
"When you saw the documents, what did you think?" Bradley
asked Burba.
"I was puzzled because actually, if those documents were
authentic, they would have been the 'smoking gun' that
everybody was looking for in that moment," she replied.
But Burba quickly suspected the documents had been forged.
"The more I looked at them and then the more I found strange
things or inconsistencies," she says.
Burba says the documents looked like were bad forgeries. She
gave copies of the papers to the U.S. Embassy in Rome. It
was the first time the U.S. government had gotten its hands
on the documents at the heart of the Niger story.
Drumheller says the CIA station chief in Rome, who worked
for him, told him he didn't believe it. "He said, 'It's not
true. It's not; this isn't real,'" Drumheller recalls.
When the documents arrived in Washington, State Department
analysts quickly concluded they were suspect. One analyst
wrote in an e-mail: "you’ll note that it bears a funky Emb.
of Niger stamp (to make it look official, I guess)."
The Washington Post recently reported that in early January
2003, the National Intelligence Council, which oversees all
U.S. intelligence agencies, did a final assessment of the
uranium rumor and submitted a report to the White House.
Their conclusion: The story was baseless. That might have
been the end of the Niger uranium story.
But it wasn’t. Just weeks later, the president laid out his
reasons for going to war in the State of the Union Address —
and there it was again.
"The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein
recently sought significant quantities of uranium from
Africa," the president said.
"I didn’t even remember all the details of it because it was
such a low-level, unimportant thing. But once it was in that
State of the Union address, it became huge," says
Drumheller.
"So, let me see if I have it correctly. The United States
gets a report that Saddam is trying to buy uranium from
Africa. But you and many others in our intelligence
community quickly knock it down. And then the uranium story
is removed from the speech that the President is to give in
Cincinnati. Because the head of the CIA, George Tenet,
doesn't believe in it?" Bradley asked.
"Right," Drumheller appeared.
It then appeared in the State of the Union address as a
British report. Drumheller, who oversaw intelligence
operations for the CIA in Europe doubts the British had
something the U.S. didn't. "No. I don’t think they did," he
says.
The British maintain they have intelligence to support the
story —but to this day, they have never shared it.
The White House declined 60 Minutes' request for an
interview for this story, but Dan Bartlett, Counselor to the
President, wrote us:
"The President’s convictions about Saddam Hussein's
possession of WMD were based on the collective judgment of
the intelligence community at that time. Bipartisan
investigations … found no evidence of political pressure to
influence the pre-war intelligence assessments of Iraq’s
weapons programs." And he added: "Saddam Hussein never
abandoned his plan to acquire WMD, and he posed a serious
threat to the American people and to the region."
On March 7, 2003, the head of the United Nations' nuclear
watchdog agency announced that the Niger uranium documents
were forgeries. The Bush administration went to war in Iraq
12 days later, without acknowledging that one of its main
arguments for going to war was false.
Four months later, Wilson, who had gone to Niger and found
nothing to substantiate the uranium rumor, went public and
wrote a piece for The New York Times claiming that the Bush
Administration had "twisted" the intelligence on Iraq:
"This was really an attempt to get the government to
acknowledge that the 16 words should never have been in the
State of the Union Address. It was as si