Conclusion: They knew they were misleading America.
http://apfn.blogspot.com/2004/08/conclusion-they-knew-they-were.html
They Knew
by David Sirota and Christy Harvey
August 4, 2004
If desperation is ugly, then Washington, D.C. today is downright
hideous.
As the 9/11 Commission recently reported, there was "no credible
evidence" of a collaborative relationship between Iraq and al
Qaeda. Similarly, no weapons of mass destruction have been found
in Iraq. With U.S. casualties mounting in an election year, the
White House is grasping at straws to avoid being held
accountable for its dishonesty.
The whitewash already has started: In July, Republicans on the
Senate Intelligence Committee released a controversial report
blaming the CIA for the mess. The panel conveniently refuses to
evaluate what the White House did with the information it was
given or how the White House set up its own special team of
Pentagon political appointees (called the Office of Special
Plans) to circumvent well-established intelligence channels. And
Vice President Dick Cheney continues to say without a shred of
proof that there is "overwhelming evidence" justifying the
administration's pre-war charges.
But as author Flannery O'Conner noted, "Truth does not change
according to our ability to stomach it." That means no matter
how much defensive spin spews from the White House, the Bush
administration cannot escape the documented fact that it was
clearly warned before the war that its rationale for invading
Iraq was weak.
Top administration officials repeatedly ignored warnings that
their assertions about Iraq's supposed Weapons of Mass
Destruction (WMD) and connections to al Qaeda were overstated.
In some cases, they were told their claims were wholly without
merit, yet they went ahead and made them anyway. Even the Senate
report admits that the White House "misrepresented" classified
intelligence by eliminating references to contradictory
assertions.
In short, they knew they were misleading America.
And they did not care.
They knew Iraq posed no nuclear threat.
There is no doubt even though there was no proof of Iraq's
complicity, the White House was focused on Iraq within hours of
the 9/11 attacks. As CBS News reported, "barely five hours after
American Airlines Flight 77 plowed into the Pentagon, Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld was telling his aides to come up
with plans for striking Iraq." Former Bush counterterrorism czar
Richard Clarke recounted vividly how, just after the attack,
President Bush pressured him to find an Iraqi connection. In
many ways, this was no surprise—as former Treasury Secretary
Paul O'Neill and another administration official confirmed, the
White House was actually looking for a way to invade Iraq well
before the terrorist attacks.
But such an unprovoked invasion of a sovereign country required
a public rationale. And so the Bush administration struck fear
into the hearts of Americans about Saddam Hussein's supposed
WMD, starting with nuclear arms. In his first major address on
the "Iraqi threat" in October 2002, President Bush invoked fiery
images of mushroom clouds and mayhem, saying, "Iraq is
reconstituting its nuclear weapons program."
Yet, before that speech, the White House had intelligence
calling this assertion into question. A 1997 report by the
U.N.'s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)—the agency
whose purpose is to prevent nuclear proliferation—stated there
was no indication Iraq ever achieved nuclear capability or had
any physical capacity for producing weapons-grade nuclear
material in the near future.
In February 2001, the CIA delivered a report to the White House
that said: "We do not have any direct evidence that Iraq has
used the period since Desert Fox to reconstitute its weapons of
mass destruction programs." The report was so definitive that
Secretary of State Colin Powell said in a subsequent press
conference, Saddam Hussein "has not developed any significant
capability with respect to weapons of mass destruction."
Ten months before the president's speech, an intelligence review
by CIA Director George Tenet contained not a single mention of
an imminent nuclear threat—or capability—from Iraq. The CIA was
backed up by Bush's own State Department: Around the time Bush
gave his speech, the department's intelligence bureau said that
evidence did not "add up to a compelling case that Iraq is
currently pursuing what [we] consider to be an integrated and
comprehensive approach to acquiring nuclear weapons."
Nonetheless, the administration continued to push forward. In
March 2003, Cheney went on national television days before the
war and claimed Iraq "has reconstituted nuclear weapons." He was
echoed by State Department spokesman Richard Boucher, who told
reporters of supposedly grave "concerns about Iraq's potential
nuclear programs."
Even after the invasion, when troops failed to uncover any
evidence of nuclear weapons, the White House refused to admit
the truth. In July 2003, Condoleezza Rice told PBS's Gwen Ifill
that the administration's nuclear assertions were "absolutely
supportable." That same month, White House spokesman Scott
McClellan insisted: "There's a lot of evidence showing that Iraq
was reconstituting its nuclear weapons program."
They knew the aluminum tubes were not for nuclear weapons.
To back up claims that Iraq was actively trying to build nuclear
weapons, the administration referred to Iraq's importation of
aluminum tubes, which Bush officials said were for enriching
uranium. In December 2002, Powell said, "Iraq has tried to
obtain high-strength aluminum tubes which can be used to enrich
uranium in centrifuges for a nuclear weapons program."
Similarly, in his 2003 State of the Union address, Bush said
Iraq "has attempted to purchase high-strength aluminum tubes
suitable for nuclear weapons production."
But, in October 2002, well before these and other administration
officials made this claim, two key agencies told the White House
exactly the opposite. The State Department affirmed reports from
Energy Department experts who concluded those tubes were
ill-suited for any kind of uranium enrichment. And according to
memos released by the Senate Intelligence Committee, the State
Department also warned Powell not to use the aluminum tubes
hypothesis in the days before his February 2003 U.N. speech. He
refused and used the aluminum tubes claim anyway.
The State Department's warnings were soon validated by the IAEA.
In March 2003, the agency's director stated, "Iraq's efforts to
import these aluminum tubes were not likely to be related" to
nuclear weapons deployment.
Yet, this evidence did not stop the White House either.
Pretending the administration never received any warnings at
all, Rice claimed in July 2003 that "the consensus view" in the
intelligence community was that the tubes "were suitable for use
in centrifuges to spin material for nuclear weapons."
Today, experts agree the administration's aluminum tube claims
were wholly without merit.
They knew the Iraq-uranium claims were not supported.
In one of the most famous statements about Iraq's supposed
nuclear arsenals, Bush said in his 2003 State of the Union
address, "The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein
recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa."
The careful phrasing of this statement highlights how dishonest
it was. By attributing the claim to an allied government, the
White House made a powerful charge yet protected itself against
any consequences should it be proved false. In fact, the
president invoked the British because his own intelligence
experts had earlier warned the White House not to make the claim
at all.
In the fall of 2002, the CIA told administration officials not
to include this uranium assertion in presidential speeches.
Specifically, the agency sent two memos to the White House and
Tenet personally called top national security officials
imploring them not to use the claim. While the warnings forced
the White House to remove a uranium reference from an October
2002 presidential address, they did not stop the charge from
being included in the 2003 State of the Union.
Not surprisingly, evidence soon emerged that forced the White
House to admit the deception. In March 2003, IAEA Director
Mohammed El Baradei said there was no proof Iraq had nuclear
weapons and added "documents which formed the basis for [the
White House's assertion] of recent uranium transactions between
Iraq and Niger are in fact not authentic." But when Cheney was
asked about this a week later, he said, "Mr. El Baradei frankly
is wrong."
Bush and Rice both tried to blame the CIA for the failure,
saying the assertion "was cleared by the intelligence services."
When the intelligence agency produced the memos it had sent to
the White House on the subject, Rice didn't miss a beat, telling
Meet The Press "it is quite possible that I didn't" read the
memos at all—as if they were "optional" reading for the nation's
top national security official on the eve of war. At about this
time, some high-level administration official or officials
leaked to the press that Ambassador Joseph Wilson's wife was an
undercover CIA agent—a move widely seen as an attempt by the
administration to punish Wilson for his July 6, 2003 New York
Times op-ed that stated he had found no evidence of an Iraqi
effort to purchase uranium from Niger.
In recent weeks, right-wing pundits have pointed to new evidence
showing the Iraq uranium charge may have flirted with the truth
at some point in the distant past. These White House hatchet men
say the administration did not manipulate or cherry-pick
intelligence. They also tout the recent British report (a.k.a.
The Butler Report) as defending the president's uranium claim.
Yet, if the White House did not cherry-pick or manipulate
intelligence, why did the president trumpet U.S. intelligence
from a foreign government while ignoring explicit warnings not
to do so from his own? The record shows U.S. intelligence
officials explicitly warned the White House that "the Brits have
exaggerated this issue." Yet, the administration refused to
listen. Even The Butler Report itself acknowledges the evidence
is cloudy. As nonproliferation expert Joseph Cirincione of the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace recently pointed out,
"The claim appears shaky at best—hardly the stuff that should
make up presidential decisions."
But now, instead of contrition, Republicans are insisting the
White House's uranium charge was accurate. Indeed, these
apologists have no option but to try to distract public
attention from the simple truth that not a shred of solid
evidence exists to substantiate this key charge that fueled the
push for war.
They knew there was no hard evidence of chemical or biological
weapons
In September 2002, President Bush said Iraq "could launch a
biological or chemical attack in as little as 45 minutes after
the order is given." The next month, he delivered a major speech
to "outline the Iraqi threat," just two days before a critical
U.N. vote. In his address, he claimed without doubt that Iraq
"possesses and produces chemical and biological weapons." He
said that "Iraq has a growing fleet of manned and unmanned
aerial vehicles (UAVs) that could be used to disperse chemical
or biological weapons" and that the government was "concerned
Iraq is exploring ways of using these UAVs for missions
targeting the United States."
What he did not say was that the White House had been explicitly
warned that these assertions were unproved.
As the Washington Post later reported, Bush "ignored the fact
that U.S. intelligence mistrusted the source" of the 45-minute
claim and, therefore, omitted it from its intelligence
estimates. And Bush ignored the fact that the Defense
Intelligence Agency previously submitted a report to the
administration finding "no reliable information" to prove Iraq
was producing or stockpiling chemical weapons. According to
Newsweek, the conclusion was similar to the findings of a 1998
government commission on WMD chaired by Rumsfeld.
Bush also neglected to point out that in early October 2002, the
administration's top military experts told the White House they
"sharply disputed the notion that Iraq's Unmanned Aerial
Vehicles were being designed as attack weapons." Specifically,
the Air Force's National Air and Space Intelligence Center
correctly showed the drones in question were too heavy to be
used to deploy chemical/biological-weapons spray devices.
Regardless, the chemical/biological weapons claims from the
administration continued to escalate. Powell told the United
Nations on February 5, 2003, "There can be no doubt that Saddam
Hussein has biological weapons and the capability to rapidly
produce more, many more." As proof, he cited aerial images of a
supposed decontamination vehicle circling a suspected weapons
site.
According to newly released documents in the Senate Intelligence
Committee report, Powell's own top intelligence experts told him
not to make such claims about the photographs. They said the
vehicles were likely water trucks. He ignored their warnings.
On March 6, 2003, just weeks before the invasion, the president
went further than Powell. He claimed, "Iraqi operatives continue
to hide biological and chemical agents."
To date, no chemical or biological weapons have been found in
Iraq.
They knew Saddam and bin Laden were not collaborating.
In the summer of 2002, USA Today reported White House lawyers
had concluded that establishing an Iraq-al Qaeda link would
provide the legal cover at the United Nations for the
administration to attack Iraq. Such a connection, no doubt, also
would provide political capital at home. And so, by the fall of
2002, the Iraq-al Qaeda drumbeat began.
It started on September 25, 2002, when Bush said, "you can't
distinguish between al Qaeda and Saddam." This was news even to
members of Bush's own political party who had access to
classified intelligence. Just a month before, Sen. Chuck Hagel
(R-Neb.), who serves on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
said, "Saddam is not in league with al Qaeda … I have not seen
any intelligence that would lead me to connect Saddam Hussein to
al Qaeda.
To no surprise, the day after Bush's statement, USA Today
reported several intelligence experts "expressed skepticism"
about the claim, with a Pentagon official calling the
president's assertion an "exaggeration." No matter, Bush ignored
these concerns and that day described Saddam Hussein as "a man
who loves to link up with al Qaeda." Meanwhile, Rumsfeld held a
press conference trumpeting "bulletproof" evidence of a
connection—a sentiment echoed by Rice and White House spokesman
Ari Fleischer. And while the New York Times noted, "the
officials offered no details to back up the assertions,"
Rumsfeld nonetheless insisted his claims were "accurate and not
debatable."
Within days, the accusations became more than just "debatable";
they were debunked. German Defense Minister Peter Stuck said the
day after Rumsfeld's press conference that his country "was not
aware of any connection" between Iraq and al Qaeda's efforts to
acquire chemical weapons. The Orlando Sentinel reported that
terrorism expert Peter Bergen—one of the few to actually
interview Osama bin Laden—said the connection between Iraq and
al Qaeda are minimal. In October 2002, Knight Ridder reported,
"a growing number of military officers, intelligence
professionals and diplomats in [Bush's] own government privately
have deep misgivings" about the Iraq-al Qaeda claims. The
experts charged that administration hawks "exaggerated
evidence." A senior U.S. official told the Philadelphia Inquirer
that intelligence analysts "contest the administration's